RWA market competition is entering a decisive phase as major blockchain networks compete for institutional financial infrastructure.
Ethereum, Solana, XRP Ledger, Avalanche, and Polygon are now pursuing different segments of tokenized finance, ranging from liquidity settlement to cross-border banking systems.
RWA market leadership still belongs largely to Ethereum as institutional liquidity continues concentrating across its ecosystem.
BlackRock’s BUIDL fund, Franklin Templeton’s tokenized products, and major Treasury-related flows remain deeply connected to Ethereum infrastructure.
Protocols including Ondo Finance, Maple Finance, Centrifuge, and Securitize have strengthened Ethereum’s institutional position during the latest expansion cycle.
The network continues benefiting from established trust, deep liquidity pools, and strong composability across decentralized finance.
Current estimates place Ethereum’s tokenized asset ecosystem between roughly $15 billion and $17 billion in value. That concentration continues to reinforce Ethereum’s role as the dominant settlement layer for institutional capital markets.
However, Ethereum’s advantages also expose limitations around scalability and operational costs. Solana is increasingly targeting that weakness by positioning itself as a faster and cheaper financial infrastructure layer.
Solana’s ecosystem has expanded rapidly through tokenized asset initiatives and high-frequency financial applications.
The network briefly surpassed Ethereum in total RWA holders while attracting growing participation from market makers and retail-focused platforms.
The broader strategy remains straightforward. Solana aims to prove that lower fees and faster settlement can attract larger liquidity pools over time. The network is therefore competing less on trust and more on execution efficiency.
XRP Ledger is pursuing a different route within the evolving RWA market by focusing directly on institutional payments and banking infrastructure. The network continues positioning itself as a messaging and settlement layer for global finance.
CBDC discussions and cross-border payment integrations remain central to XRP Ledger’s long-term strategy. Its ISO 20022 compatibility also strengthens interoperability between blockchain settlement systems and traditional banking infrastructure.
Recent market commentary stated that XRP Ledger is avoiding direct competition within broader decentralized finance markets. Instead, it focuses specifically on interbank settlement systems and institutional financial communication networks.
Avalanche is also expanding its institutional presence through customizable blockchain infrastructure. Its subnet architecture allows financial institutions to operate isolated blockchain environments while maintaining privacy and operational flexibility.
That model continues attracting enterprise-focused experimentation across tokenized financial products and private market infrastructure.
Institutions increasingly prefer dedicated blockchain systems rather than exposing sensitive activity to fully public networks.
Polygon is simultaneously positioning itself as an accessible institutional entry layer through corporate pilots and zero-knowledge scaling technology.
Traditional firms continue using Polygon to test tokenized financial products without abandoning existing operational frameworks.
The broader competitive landscape now reflects a fragmented infrastructure race rather than a single winner-takes-all market. Different networks are increasingly specializing in liquidity, settlement, payments, scalability, and enterprise integration.
Boston Consulting Group estimates that tokenized assets could eventually approach $16 trillion by 2030. That projection continues accelerating competition among blockchain ecosystems seeking dominance across institutional financial infrastructure.
The post Ethereum, Solana, XRP Compete for RWA Infrastructure Dominance appeared first on Blockonomi.

