Tokenization is crypto’s center of gravity. The tokenization of regulated assets has been crypto’s longest-standing barrier. It is the upgrade path for global capital markets. This is the centerpiece of Chintai’s strategy and the main driver behind an investment thesis on $CHEX—one of the most underowned and overlooked tokens for RWA exposure. Chintai is operating in a “grow-the-pie” business, with total RWA value increasing, alongside growth in its share within the non-stablecoin RWA segment.

Past cycles’ bottleneck was “getting real assets onchain.” That bottleneck is gone. Now, the real prize goes to platforms that let institutions issue, distribute, and trade assets under their own brand, with full regulatory compliance. Chintai is ahead of new entrants, with live, compliant RWA tokenization and real traction.
There’s a stark gap between the assets Chintai handles and the market cap of its token. The platform anchors real institutional money and live asset flows, yet its token trades at a fraction of that value ($668M of total value issued vs $CHEX’s $161M market cap). This disconnect exists because Chintai’s private, compliant model hides real traction from crypto’s usual trackers and screeners. NDAs, for instance, don’t hit public feeds. The result is a business with deep, growing fundamentals in a market with enormous total addressable value and rising penetration. That remains hidden from view—until the market catches up.

A thesis is only as strong as the market’s ability to act on it. For $CHEX, that means more buyers and better liquidity—otherwise, conviction can’t translate into price. CCIP and future collaborations with Chainlink act as a tailwind. Future CEX listings and derivative venues would decrease friction and make it easier for new capital to enter as well.
No thesis is bulletproof. For $CHEX, the cracks appear if fresh buyers don’t materialize, liquidity stays shallow, staking activation keeps being delayed, or buybacks don’t lift price. The trade only works if real flows and adoption keep rising—otherwise, conviction alone won’t stop the slide.
Key Takeaways
- Tokenization’s Inflection Point: Chintai is already live and ahead of the RWA compliance, issuance, and distribution curve.
- Full-Stack Asset Tokenization: Chintai offers a turnkey, licensed platform for institutions to issue and trade RWAs, compressing the RWA lifecycle.
- Regulatory Moat: Chintai’s dual licensing (Singapore MAS and BVI VASP) and multi-jurisdictional structure are a defensible competitive advantage that is already translating into real deals.
- Cross-vertical breadth reduces cyclicality: Beyond real estate: art, metals, carbon, collectibles, mining infra—one stack, many lifecycles, diversified fee mix.
- Global Expansion Playbook: Chintai is actively pursuing US, UAE, and Hong Kong licenses, creating a global network of regulated bases. Partnerships provide indirect US access while awaiting direct approvals.
- Under-the-Radar Institutional Traction: Chintai’s private, compliant model means institutional flows are invisible to typical crypto trackers.
- Narrative-Fundamentals Disconnect: Licensed product-market-fit is real, managing a substantially larger amount of assets relative to $CHEX’s market cap (more than ~3x).
- Hidden Past Surface-Level Metrics: Chintai’s NDA-heavy model hides real traction from public crypto data sources and screeners, making the scale of its business invisible to most market participants.
- Fully-Diluted, Deflationary Token: No selling pressure from early investors unlocks or ongoing inflationary emissions; revenue is used for buybacks and deflationary pressure instead.
- Token Value Accrual: 10% of all platform fees paid to stakers (market buybacks) and 5% allocated to buyback-and-burn.
- Market Cap Lags Reality: The disconnect between deep fundamentals and $CHEX’s market cap creates a rare entry point, setting up asymmetric upside.
- Convexity From Access Friction: $CHEX is fully diluted, with no emissions or unlocks, but remains hard to access. Even modest improvements in liquidity or listings could drive outsized price moves.
- Long List of Unexpected Catalysts on the Horizon: Tier-1 CEX listings, perps, or index inclusion (RWA index) could rapidly re-rate $CHEX. The recent CCIP integration enables crosschain transfers and broader accessibility.
- More Levers to Pull: The buyback-and-burn mechanism is a major value driver. Leaning into this narrative could increase the estimated burn ratio.
- Additional Boosts: Live deployments involve capital deployed in tranches, gradually increasing $CHEX demand, staking rewards, and burn—turning client growth into token buy-pressure and supply reduction.
- Actionable Today: The gap between Chintai’s real-world traction and $CHEX’s market cap is the opportunity. Early, informed conviction is rewarded before the market catches on.
- Key Risks: The thesis breaks if new buyers don’t materialize, liquidity stays shallow, or buybacks fail to lift price—watch for persistent lower-highs/lower-lows as a cut signal.
- Negative Reflexivity Threat: If buybacks fail and staking activation keeps being delayed, then management credibility and pipeline momentum may suffer, stakers unwind, and the fee-to-$CHEX sink thesis is impaired.
- Monitor for Structural Breaks: Treat the position as structurally broken if volume growth or new buyer cohorts do not appear after negative reflexivity sets in.
Institutional DNA, Team & Fundraising
Chintai is a Singapore‑headquartered, MAS‑regulated platform for compliant issuance, transfer‑agent functions, and secondary trading of digital securities and other RWAs. It holds a Capital Markets Services (CMS) license and Recognised Market Operator (RMO) status. Its regulatory approvals allow institutions to manage the full asset lifecycle with built-in KYC and geofencing.
Team and incentives skew institutional: CEO David Packham (ex‑HSBC, Barclays, Goldman; order‑management and risk systems), COO‑founder Ryan Bethem, CTO-founder Phillip Hamnett, and a compliance and security bench including a Chief Compliance Officer and a CISO from Deutsche Börse/PwC. This mix—market infrastructure, compliance, and security—is unusual among crypto‑native RWA stacks and is central to sales towards regulated clients.
For $CHEX, tracking the historical evolution of the project matters. Chintai began as an EOS‑based resource‑leasing exchange in 2018–20, then pivoted to a regulated capital‑markets platform, culminating in MAS approvals in 2022 and a roll‑out of a white‑label issuance/trading stack (Nexus).
Fundraising involves $7.5 million seed in 2021, and additional undisclosed financing in 2023 led by Block.one. Going forward, David Packham, Chintai CEO, hinted at the Series A round opening. News about that could surface, announcing how much was raised and from whom. That catalyst could materialize this quarter (Q3 2025).
The maximum token supply is 1 billion; initial distribution April–Dec 2019 with 60% sold (involving KYC/AML), 20% to team, 20% reserved for operations; the whitepaper later noted ~124M in reserve as of July‑2023. As of 2025, exchange and issuer materials state 100% of tokens are in circulation, i.e., no further emissions.

Value accrual levers are i) gas‑fee conversion into $CHEX, ii) fee‑funded staking distributions (charged in stables/fiat used to buyback $CHEX and distribute the proceeds with stakers), and iii) a 5% buyback‑and‑burn. Without net new emissions or unlock, marginal supply is mainly from holders’ sell decisions, not unlocks. Offsetting that, the 5% buyback‑and‑burn adds a deflationary tail when activity scales.
Overview: Full-stack Asset Tokenization
Traditional assets—from real estate to bonds—have long been locked away for most investors. Chintai changes this by building a licensed platform that makes it easy (and legal) to turn these assets into tokens anyone can trade. Institutions and enterprises can move faster, stay compliant, and reach more investors. The result: more liquidity, less friction, and a path to true democratization of finance.

Tokenization is Chintai’s lifeblood and its growth engine. Chintai lets businesses issue and trade RWAs on a compliant private L1, with $CHEX serving as the network currency for gas fees and staking rewards. It offers institutions a ready-made licensed stack—issuance, compliant trading, settlement, and reporting—under the client’s branding. This compression of the RWA lifecycle allows for efficiency gains that result in faster time-to-market, lower back office costs, and broader investor reach. It’s the full-stack approach, combined with optional white-label branding, that creates high switching costs, enabling fast deployment, efficient trading, and end-to-end compliance.

Chintai’s business model mirrors a traditional exchange/market infrastructure provider running a L1 blockchain. The economics scale with the volume and value of assets tokenized. Its token, $CHEX, is explicitly designed to capture a share of the economic value generated. $CHEX is the required gas currency for all transactions on the L1 and staking entitles holders to earn a share of the platform fees. Specifically, 10% of all fees Chintai earns from issuance, trading, and account maintenance is allocated as rewards to $CHEX stakers. This staking yield is a primary way value flows to token holders. Another 5% is allocated for buyback-and-burn. Nonetheless, it’s worth noting that staking rewards haven’t been activated yet. Chintai is waiting to onboard a new wave of clients first to ensure meaningful rewards. That’s expected to go live in Q3 or Q4 2025 (at the team’s discretion).
With active and future deals in play, $CHEX’s demand should exceed supply, raising its price. This bull stance would be supported by i) a regulatory moat attracting institutions, ii) a vertically integrated platform offering issuance, trading, and compliance as a service, iii) favorable tokenomics aligning usage and growth with value accrual, iv) demonstrated traction through sizable tokenization deals already launched or in pipeline, and v) a strategy of global expansion and partnerships likely to multiply distribution channels.
Dual Licensing (MAS) & Two-platform Structure (Nexus)
One of Chintai’s standout differentiators is its proactive approach to regulation. In an industry that has predominantly thrived on regulatory arbitrage, Chintai has insisted on deliberately securing licenses and aligning closely with financial authorities. This strategy required significant upfront effort (years of applications), but it now provides Chintai with a defensible market position that is difficult for competitors to replicate quickly.
Chintai Network Services Pte. Ltd. in Singapore holds two licenses from the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS): a Capital Markets Services (CMS) license and a Recognized Market Operator (RMO) license. These allow Chintai to legally conduct primary issuance of digital securities (similar to an investment bank issuing securities) and operate a secondary trading platform for them (facilitating trading for tokenized assets). The scope of permissible assets covers equities, bonds, real estate, funds, commodities, etc., as digital securities.
MAS licenses are consistently a key factor in attracting clients. They signal trust and operational rigor. Institutions prefer vetted partners, and Singapore’s standards are high. Clearing this bar in 2022 means that Chintai proved itself through real scrutiny. Passing that test has allowed them to operate with first-mover advantage under the shield of regulatory approval. MAS also actively monitors licensees, and maintaining them signals operational maturity.
Additionally, because not all tokenized assets are securities, Chintai smartly set up a dual structure: Chintai Singapore (covered above) for regulated securities, and Chintai Nexus for everything else. Nexus is a separate business unit, ring-fenced in the British Virgin Islands (BVI). It handles primary issuance of non-security tokens (utility tokens, carbon credits, or other assets that don’t fall under strict securities laws). Nexus has its own regulatory pathway: Chintai had an existing BVI license (from earlier operations) which is being upgraded to a new Virtual Asset Service Provider (VASP) license. BVI is a popular jurisdiction for digital asset firms, and getting a VASP license there further legitimizes Nexus’s operations.

The main takeaway: both platforms run on the same blockchain, with $CHEX underpinning both. Legally and operationally they’re separate, showing that Chintai is methodical in jurisdictional strategy. At the same time, there is a cross-jurisdiction advantage. Few players have this nuanced setup; many operate either entirely in regulatory gray areas or are siloed in one jurisdiction. This transnational reach is a competitive edge.
Recognizing the importance of the U.S. market, Chintai is actively pursuing SEC and FINRA approvals. They have an ongoing application for a U.S. broker-dealer license and an Alternative Trading System (ATS) license. The timeline for approval is uncertain, but expected to act as a meaningful catalyst. In the interim, Chintai has formed partnerships to get indirect US access. Baird Augustine and AlloXyz are U.S.-based partners with existing broker-dealer and ATS registrations, through whom Chintai can route U.S. offerings.
Beyond the US, Chintai is also seeking licenses in the UAE and Hong Kong—two regions vying to be crypto hubs. Hong Kong’s new crypto regulations allow licensed platforms to offer security tokens to institutions, and the UAE (Abu Dhabi Global Market or Dubai’s VARA regime) is also establishing paths for regulated digital asset issuance.
Approvals in these jurisdictions effectively create a global network of regulated bases across continents. There’s a saying that regulatory moats can be the strongest moats, because once you have a license and a working platform, it becomes a competitive advantage rather than a hurdle.
Competitors embarking on this journey will find it prohibitively time-consuming and expensive to replicate this network of licenses. A license does more than check a box—it keeps competitors at bay and lets you shape regulatory standards early. With compliance locked in, a platform gains an edge that lasts. What once slowed you down now keeps others out. Chintai’s been at it for 5+ years.
PMF Proof, Tranche-based Growth & Scalable Playbooks
Live deployments show product-market-fit and set the foundation for repeatable playbooks across assets and geographies. The visible track record allows prospective clients to adopt established practices. This lowers friction and accelerates onboarding across markets. The template is in place: others can follow the same structure, adapt it to their industry, and unlock new sources of capital and liquidity for assets that were previously hard to finance or trade.
RealNOIproves cash flow tokenization scales. Going live in February 2025 with $570M of rental income streams (~1,900 apartments), paying ~5% to investors. Issuance, payouts, and trading run on Chintai, demonstrating how cash-flow rights avoid title transfer friction. Investors purchase “RentStream” tokens entitling them to ~5% annual yields from rental income, and property owners get upfront capital. Proving fast, 24/7 settlement and onchain transparency for traditionally illiquid assets, countless versions of RealNOI can be replicated across sectors for royalties or any asset with recurring cash flows.
KIN Capitalvalidates fund/debt rails. With a $100M tokenized real-estate debt fund and ~14–15% target yields, quarterly distributions are automated onchain. Fund tokenization is another example of financial services innovation. Deloitte has already taken notice, using Chintai as an example.
Patel Real Estate Holdings (PREH)launched a $100M Class A multifamily fund. This fund is particularly noteworthy because it’s part of a larger $750M joint venture with Carlyle and KKR (major private equity firms) to invest in multifamily properties. This allows accredited investors to access fractional exposure to an institutional-grade real estate portfolio. Quarterly distributions (e.g., rental income or eventual sale proceeds) and investor voting rights are handled onchain.
The breadth beyond real-estate is tangible. Other live clients cover a diverse array of asset classes:
- Athena Art Finance tokenizes high-value art portfolios.
- SmartGold issues tokens backed by precious metals such as gold and silver.
- DNA Fund and Other Family Offices dedicated to private equity/pre-IPO shares.
Chintai’s growth isn’t pausing, with major deals and client momentum signaling multi-billion-dollar scale for tokenized portfolios. UAE clients piloting tokenized oil bonds, for example, could open up the doors to the Middle East market. Many of the live deployments are executed in tranches, bringing in a constant influx of capital over time. Not only would each additional tranche generate more fee revenue, but any positive performance could garner case studies and press.

Success would attract more funds, each adding to credibility and diversified usage. Even the hint of a global PE firm engaging in blockchain via Chintai could be a major sentiment boost, as it implies heavyweight validation. The same applies if high-profile clients under NDA are revealed. Big names might or might not manifest in the short term, but any one of them doing so would be a major catalyst with news dropping unpredictably.
Investment Thesis
Chintai already intermediates hundreds of millions in real‑asset flows while $CHEX trades at only ~$161M market cap. RealNOI alone put $570M of rental cash flows on Chintai this year. All issuance and trading consume $CHEX and create structural token demand, yet the equity-like reflex sits in a sub $200M market cap token, which we consider a small cap token. That gap is the opportunity.

$CHEX flies under the radar of the usual crypto screeners because the pipeline involves enterprises and is NDA-heavy. White-label portals fragment the surface and client-branded portals hide the scale. The work happens off the usual crypto map. Non-obvious by construction, this liquid opportunity is also something that you cannot capture on exchanges like Binance or Coinbase. Kraken and Gate constitute the main trading volumes, along with Uniswap’s CHEX/WETH pair on Ethereum.

Chintai’s regulatory positioning across the globe confers credibility, legal clarity, and market access that many competitors lack. Multi-jurisdiction licenses and a broad roster of clients make it possible to dominate specific territories while also looking to scale on regions. Even though licenses alone don’t guarantee success, they open doors and close deals. Securitize, for instance, is a registered transfer agent, broker-dealer, and ATS in the U.S., but lacks a liquid token you can invest in. Meanwhile, RWA tokens like $ONDO (~$9.5B FDV) trade at oversized valuations and lack value accrual for token holders.

The white-label, multi-exchange model fuels network effects and rapid expansion. Every new client brings revenue and strengthens the network, providing a repeatable playbook for other issuers to replicate across asset classes. Instead of a single marketplace, Chintai seeds many, each compliant and connected on one chain. The result: a compounding flywheel of issuers, investors, and asset diversity.
Moats are always appreciated, but it’s also worth asking: is it earning returns? Chintai operates as a B2B SaaS and marketplace for tokenized assets, with $CHEX being the currency for the underlying L1.
- Primary Issuance Fees are proportional to size and paid by the issuer. The exact percentage can vary based on asset class and complexity; what’s pertinent, however, is that tokenization allows for this charge to be significantly cheaper than traditional rails. Clients come looking for cost-savings and, for Chintai, this represents substantial income per deal.
- Secondary Trading Fees incur transaction costs, with trading fees as a percentage of the exchanged value. This model is similar to an exchange, capturing a slice of every trade. Issuers, as liquidity providers, also earn this revenue—something that would be unthinkable if they decided to follow the traditional non-blockchain route.
- Platform & Maintenance Fees via fixed periodic fees to issuers for using the platform, covering services like onboarding investors, compliance monitoring (KYC/AML checks), automated reporting, and tech support. This is like a SaaS subscription or licensing fee for the white-label offering. It also provides recurring revenue that is more predictable and does not depend on trading volumes. This incentivizes Chintai to keep assets on the platform for long durations.
Users can pay in USD/stables, but all actions require $CHEX under the hood. The mandatory fee conversion for onchain transactions means mandatory continuous demand. Stakers earn 10% of platform fees, funded out of issuance and trading activity. Another 5% of the value generated is used to buy back $CHEX on the open market and permanently burn it. The larger the onboarding funnel, the harder the token sink. Based on the perceived valuation relative to achieved milestones, the burn rate could easily be raised for signaling purposes. Given a ~998M token supply, the current single digit number stands out as relatively low and could be lifted to 10% or 20% during different seasons.

With the tokenization narrative heating up, $CHEX is one of the most attractive bets from a R/R perspective. $ONDO, as an example, has no value accrual, the treasury holds ~60% of the supply, and trades at $9.5B FDV, 49x times above Chintai’s. $CHEX is a fully diluted token. There are no pending supply unlocks to early investors or ongoing inflation. The recently (August 12, 2025) announced integration of CCIP makes $CHEX crosschain, enabling transfers to and from other ecosystems, also making the token accessible to more buyers as a result. Coinbase, for instance, is now making every token on Base available for trading from its app without an enforced CEX listing.

The scale of the opportunity also implies that small moves can yield outsized gains. Chintai features an uncommon dynamic where the project’s fundamentals have been in the works for 5+ years. At the same time, the token has been absent from Tier-1 retail venues and there are no liquid perps either. The friction to access the token has kept ownership low. Even modest broadening can push disproportionate flow.

Large TAM, tight pipes. Widen the pipes a little and the move can be big, especially for a fully diluted, buy-pressured, buyback-and-burn model. That distribution gap creates convexity that can materialize in multiple ways, such as Tier-1 CEX listings, perps, or index inclusion (e.g. “tokenization narrative” or RWA index). Widen access a notch—remove buy frictions, deepen books—and flow meets a thin float where attention follows receipts. That’s how this quiet, fully diluted token steps into the mainstream without emissions or chart-painting post ticker-change and token migration.
The $CHEX Convexity Case
It’s rare to find liquid tokens that are already fully diluted and capture four reinforcing drivers: constant demand, real yield, shrinking supply, and rapid distribution surface expansion. Continuous demand comes from mandatory fee conversion; yield is sourced from real platform activity; supply shrinks through buyback and burn without ongoing inflation; and integrations like CCIP broaden reach just as tokenization (the vertical with the largest TAM for crypto) monopolizes the industry’s mindshare. $CHEX is one of the few live examples of this setup: structural bid with a declining float and equity-like value tied to activity with no emissions or selling pressure from investor unlocks. These setups are scarce. Combined with tokenization, crypto’s pivotal breakthrough and today’s main storyline, the right catalyst can drive convex returns and tip the odds toward asymmetric upside.

$CHEX’s Kraken debut on June 18 introduced the asset to a U.S. and European regulated exchange audience. Kraken is known for thorough vetting, so this listing acts as a stamp of legitimacy that can set a precedent for other exchanges to follow suit. Chintai fits a strategic niche that CEXs in the U.S., and especially Asia, may want to keep in their back pocket.
If/When price rises significantly (like in Dec 2024 or Aug 2025), Chintai gains visibility and credibility. In crypto, that’s going to attract momentum traders. This hasn’t been a meaningful factor yet, given the limited exchange venues and absence of derivatives. Still, $CHEX presents a clear target for those chasing beta exposure to RWAs. When catalysts hit, we know from experience that the token re-rates rather quickly—a sign that large buyers are willing to eat some price impact in exchange for FOMO satisfaction. Assuming fundamental buyers quietly accumulate on dips, that contributes to creating a floor over time that could make $CHEX more uncorrelated to $BTC and $ETH over time.
When large buyers see clear signs of real traction and catalysts, they move fast to secure exposure. In illiquid markets, the fear of missing out on a re-rating outweighs the cost of imperfect execution.
Risks & Invalidations
Bidding at current levels is a bet on early buyers having already sold or doubling down on their conviction to lower their cost basis. Repeated price spikes have already offered multiple exit opportunities, and the steep drop from $0.8 late 2024 (4x from the current price) implies heavy selling.
It’s also worth noting that, at the end of the day, buyers are all you need. Licenses and regulatory moats don’t necessarily convert to volume. Distribution also stalls if traditional players remain stuck in their ways and hesitate to make the leap (or at least through Chintai instead of building their own solution or deploying tokenized assets on public chains).
A compliant and more efficient system only works if traditional institutions are willing to make the leap. Without their buy-in, momentum fades. For Chintai to scale, it must convert institutional caution into conviction. Some clients, for instance, demand public-chain composability for DeFi utility. While $CHEX is now crosschain with Chainlink’s CCIP, its assets still remain siloed in a centralized private chain with downgraded collateral utility or substantial DeFi integrations.

On the market side of things, once the buyback engine is on, $CHEX’s sink becomes entirely visible and trackable onchain (for better or worse). Liquidity must also become investable. If CEX’s depth stays thin, volumes stagnant, and no new venues/derivatives list, investors can’t size up their positions in meaningful ways. This can be a deterrent for attracting the type of marginal buyers that kick off the reflexivity game. Also, staking rewards haven’t been activated yet. That’s contingent on deals being signed and rests at the team’s discretion. Without direct cash flows, price may decouple from usage near term.
For $CHEX, price must confirm catalysts: failure to reclaim breakdown levels and persistent lower-highs/lower-lows imply the bid isn’t real. Those are scenarios indicating that it may be pertinent to cut. If buybacks don’t move the price, the market learns two things: organic demand is weak and structural sellers still dominate. Such a signaling failure would erode management credibility, widen the risk premium, and make new venues or derivatives less likely. Liquidity thins, stakers unwind on muted or delayed yield, and issuers may read the situation as “instability and slow the pipeline.” Reflexivity flips negative and, at that point, the fee-to-$CHEX sink thesis is impaired. In that event, the position should be treated as structurally broken until volume growth or new buyer cohorts appear.
Conclusion
Our view diverges from a possibly cautious market consensus in that we believe Chintai’s progress de-risks many uncertainties. With $CHEX usage being hardwired into regulated financial operations, our perception is that $CHEX at $0.15 does not yet reflect Chintai’s status as a revenue-generating, enterprise-grade platform. As one of the few liquid (and only fully diluted) proxies offering direct exposure to broad asset tokenization (spanning all asset classes), we see an asymmetry where downside is cushioned by tangible progress (and token buybacks), while upside from even a handful of big deals or exchange listings could be significant.
Alternative vehicles to get exposure to the multi-trillion tokenization thesis either lack a token (e.g. Securitize) or don’t offer such an asymmetric profile (e.g. $ONDO at $9.5B FDB vs $CHEX’s $161M FDV and no value accrual). Buying on strength after the steep decline since the beginning of the year gives comfort if/when you have conviction on this bet playing out. Implicitly, that’s betting on capitulation being over while expecting the structural bid to remain intact and growing.
What must be true for the thesis to play out long-term is straightforward: more regulated issuance and secondary trading must flow through Chintai so that conversion into $CHEX, staking payouts, and burns scale. Two near‑term flow accelerants are i) new RWA launches on the platform, and ii) deeper market liquidity with additional CEX/DEX access post‑Kraken listing, lowering friction for finding new marginal buyers.
References
Chainlink. CHEX Becomes a Cross-Chain Token With CCIP Security.
Chintai. Chex Token Community.
Chintai. Chintai Nexus 2025 Whitepaper.
Deloitte. Tokenized Real Estate – 2025 Industry Predictions.
RWA.xyz. RWA Market Intelligence Platform.
Tracxn. Chintai – Funding Rounds and Investors.
Disclosures
Alea Research has never had a commercial relationship with Chintai and this report was not paid for or commissioned in any way.
Members of the Alea Research team, including those directly involved in the analysis above, may have positions in the tokens discussed.
This content is provided for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. You should do your own research and only invest what you can afford to lose. Alea Research is a research platform and not an investment or financial advisor.