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Have you ever wondered why it is so troublesome for you living in Taiwan to buy a US stock? Account opening, remittance, time difference, fees, tax declaration... a series of obstacles have deterred many people. But if I tell you that there is a new way that is quietly changing all this, making investing in the global stock market as easy as buying a cup of coffee on your mobile phone, would you believe it? The "Copernican Revolution" of Financial Infrastructure In the past few months, a concept called "tokenized stocks" has begun to attract attention in the financial circle. Simply put, it is to use blockchain technology to "package" traditional stocks into digital tokens, so that you can use a cryptocurrency wallet to buy and sell Tesla, Apple, and Pfizer stocks. It sounds cool, but what is the deeper meaning? This represents a fundamental shift in the thinking of financial services: from "requiring users to adapt to the financial system" to "making the financial system adapt to user needs." Imagine that in the past, to invest in U.S. stocks, you needed to: find a supporting brokerage, prepare a bunch of English documents, wait for account opening review, wire U.S. dollars, bear exchange rate losses, endure time zone restrictions... The whole process may take several weeks. Now, the tokenized stock platform allows you to use stable currencies to buy U.S. stocks at any time through a mobile app in a few minutes. No traditional brokerage account is required, no complicated international remittances are required, and even fractional shares can be purchased - for example, 0.1 shares of Berkshire stock can be purchased with $50. This is not the first time that an innovation has been "ridiculed" If you think this sounds "too radical" or "unreliable", I completely understand. Because every innovation that has truly changed the financial industry in history has been ridiculed by mainstream institutions at the beginning. In the 1990s, when ETFs (index stock funds) first appeared, traditional fund managers on Wall Street thought it was a "strange experiment". They said, "Who would want a strange thing that is neither a stock nor a fund?", "This will make the market chaotic!" What is the result? Today, ETFs manage more than $10 trillion in assets and have become one of the most important investment tools in the world. It has turned diversified investments that were originally only available to the rich into financial services that ordinary people can afford. Tokenized stocks are following the same path. The core problem it solves is that of the $255 trillion in tradable securities in the world, only $28.6 trillion is actively circulating. Most assets are trapped in various geographical, regulatory, and technological barriers. The real game changer: fractional ownership The most revolutionary thing about tokenized stocks is not the technology itself, but that it redefines the concept of "ownership." Traditional stock investment has an invisible threshold: buying a whole share. Want to invest in Eastman Kodak? One share costs $150. Want to invest in Berkshire Hathaway? One share costs $500,000. For most people, this is an astronomical figure. But tokenization technology can cut a stock into tens of millions of "molecules." You can buy a small portion of Berkshire with $10 and a small portion of Tesla with $20. This is not just about lowering the threshold, but fundamentally changing who can participate in the global capital market. Imagine an Uber driver in the Philippines who saves $100 a month. In the past, he could only buy local bank deposits or government bonds. Now, he can use stable currencies to invest in US technology stocks, German industrial stocks, and Japanese consumer stocks to build a truly global investment portfolio.
Have you ever wondered why it is so troublesome for you living in Taiwan to buy a US stock? Account opening, remittance, time difference, fees, tax declaration... a series of obstacles have deterred many people. But if I tell you that there is a new way that is quietly changing all this, making investing in the global stock market as easy as buying a cup of coffee on your mobile phone, would you believe it? The "Copernican Revolution" of Financial Infrastructure In the past few months, a concept called "tokenized stocks" has begun to attract attention in the financial circle. Simply put, it is to use blockchain technology to "package" traditional stocks into digital tokens, so that you can use a cryptocurrency wallet to buy and sell Tesla, Apple, and Pfizer stocks. It sounds cool, but what is the deeper meaning? This represents a fundamental shift in the thinking of financial services: from "requiring users to adapt to the financial system" to "making the financial system adapt to user needs." Imagine that in the past, to invest in U.S. stocks, you needed to: find a supporting brokerage, prepare a bunch of English documents, wait for account opening review, wire U.S. dollars, bear exchange rate losses, endure time zone restrictions... The whole process may take several weeks. Now, the tokenized stock platform allows you to use stable currencies to buy U.S. stocks at any time through a mobile app in a few minutes. No traditional brokerage account is required, no complicated international remittances are required, and even fractional shares can be purchased - for example, 0.1 shares of Berkshire stock can be purchased with $50. This is not the first time that an innovation has been "ridiculed" If you think this sounds "too radical" or "unreliable", I completely understand. Because every innovation that has truly changed the financial industry in history has been ridiculed by mainstream institutions at the beginning. In the 1990s, when ETFs (index stock funds) first appeared, traditional fund managers on Wall Street thought it was a "strange experiment". They said, "Who would want a strange thing that is neither a stock nor a fund?", "This will make the market chaotic!" What is the result? Today, ETFs manage more than $10 trillion in assets and have become one of the most important investment tools in the world. It has turned diversified investments that were originally only available to the rich into financial services that ordinary people can afford. Tokenized stocks are following the same path. The core problem it solves is that of the $255 trillion in tradable securities in the world, only $28.6 trillion is actively circulating. Most assets are trapped in various geographical, regulatory, and technological barriers. The real game changer: fractional ownership The most revolutionary thing about tokenized stocks is not the technology itself, but that it redefines the concept of "ownership." Traditional stock investment has an invisible threshold: buying a whole share. Want to invest in Eastman Kodak? One share costs $150. Want to invest in Berkshire Hathaway? One share costs $500,000. For most people, this is an astronomical figure. But tokenization technology can cut a stock into tens of millions of "molecules." You can buy a small portion of Berkshire with $10 and a small portion of Tesla with $20. This is not just about lowering the threshold, but fundamentally changing who can participate in the global capital market. Imagine an Uber driver in the Philippines who saves $100 a month. In the past, he could only buy local bank deposits or government bonds. Now, he can use stable currencies to invest in US technology stocks, German industrial stocks, and Japanese consumer stocks to build a truly global investment portfolio.