Svmuu News JPMorgan Chase A recent report indicates that while tokenized money market funds offer the potential for returns, they still account for only about 5% of the broader “stablecoin ecosystem,” and the central role of stablecoins in the crypto ecosystem is unlikely to be replaced in the short term. The report states that stablecoins have become the default “cash-like instrument” for trading, collateralization, settlement, cross-border payments, and liquidity management, and are widely used on centralized exchanges and DeFi protocols. In contrast, tokenized money market funds are subject to securities regulations, which impose restrictions on registration, disclosure, and transfer, creating structural regulatory disadvantages. Analysts at theJPMorgan Chase, led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou, predict that barring significant changes in the regulatory environment, the market size of tokenized money market funds is unlikely to exceed 10%–15% of the overall stablecoin market.Current demand is primarily concentrated among yield-seeking crypto-native investors and institutional capital seeking to balance on-chain settlement with the protection of traditional assets. The report also notes that while tokenized funds offer advantages such as near-real-time settlement, 24/7 transfers, and automated clearing, their growth remains constrained by liquidity, counterparty risk, and regulatory uncertainty. JPMorgan Chase believes that without regulatory easing, such products will struggle to challenge the infrastructure-level status of stablecoins in the crypto market.(CoinDesk)