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Flow Capital of Hong Kong partners with DigiFT to move its $150 million credit fund onto blockchain.

17.04.2026 10:13

Flow Capital Partners is preparing to shift its $150 million private‑credit vehicle onto the DigiFT tokenization platform, with the migration slated for completion before the end of April. The move is part of a broader strategy that aims to grow the fund’s assets under management to $250 million by the close of 2026, a target reiterated by the firm’s chief investment officer, Jacky Tian. In tandem with the platform transition, Flow Capital intends to attract an additional $30 million in tokenized commitments before the year’s close, expanding the fund’s on‑chain footprint beyond its initial launch in June 2025.

Bloomberg reported that the Hong Kong‑based manager will issue on‑chain shares of the credit fund, allowing investors to subscribe and trade the product directly on a public blockchain. This approach mirrors a rising wave of traditional financial instruments being re‑hosted on distributed ledgers to unlock round‑the‑clock liquidity, instantaneous settlement and enhanced transparency. Analysts at Bitfinex highlighted that the current market evolution is being driven by infrastructure upgrades, noting that on‑chain assets enable “real‑time transfer, global auditability and improved transparency” when contrasted with legacy settlement rails.

The broader real‑world asset (RWA) ecosystem is experiencing a surge, with CoinGecko data showing the total market capitalization of tokenized RWAs hitting a record $58 billion in mid‑April. Ethereum‑based tokenization alone has more than doubled year‑over‑year, pushing its specific RWA market cap past $19.3 billion—a growth rate exceeding 200 % YoY. These gains are not confined to credit; tokenized commodities have already amassed a valuation of roughly $7 billion, underscoring the diversification of blockchain‑backed offerings.

Flow Capital’s initiative follows notable entries by major institutions. BlackRock’s BUIDL fund has become a primary conduit for on‑chain Treasury exposure, while JPMorgan reopened its MONY money‑market fund to external investors after an initial $100 million internal seed. Together, these developments illustrate how established players are leveraging public blockchains to modernize asset classes, improve access, and meet the escalating demand for transparent, liquid investment vehicles.