BlackRock's BUIDL tokenized treasury fund is expanding to Arbitrum. The expansion represents a shift in institutional tokenization strategy, moving beyond single-chain mainnet infrastructure to layer-2 networks. The move addresses cost constraints associated with Ethereum mainnet while maintaining compatibility. Institutional asset managers are increasingly treating tokenization as scalable infrastructure rather than experimental technology, with BlackRock's expansion strengthening the argument that tokenized real-world assets require distribution networks beyond mainnet-only deployment.
BlackRock Selects Arbitrum for Layer-2 Distribution
Layer-2 networks are increasingly where projects go when they want Ethereum compatibility without always accepting mainnet cost constraints. Arbitrum serves as a home for the next phase of tokenized asset distribution.
Institutional products still need security and credibility, but they also need usability. Tokenized treasuries cannot remain trapped inside the most expensive version of the stack if they are going to scale.
Institutional Asset Managers Adopt Tokenization Infrastructure
BlackRock's involvement reinforces that tokenization is not just a crypto-native talking point anymore. Large asset managers are treating it as infrastructure worth testing and expanding.
For Arbitrum and the wider Ethereum ecosystem, that is an endorsement. For the market, it is another sign that the real-world asset theme still has momentum.
The information is based on reports from Securitize.
FAQ
What did BlackRock announce about its BUIDL fund?
BlackRock's BUIDL tokenized treasury fund is expanding to Arbitrum, moving beyond single-chain Ethereum mainnet deployment to layer-2 infrastructure.
Why did BlackRock choose Arbitrum for expansion?
Arbitrum provides Ethereum compatibility without mainnet cost constraints, addressing scalability needs for tokenized asset distribution while maintaining security requirements for institutional products.