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Recently, I've been seeing a bunch of RWA on-chain projects promoting "on-chain liquidity," and I'm a bit suspicious: often what they call liquidity isn't really liquidity, but an illusion of "being able to sell." To put it simply, being able to place orders on the secondary market doesn't mean you can redeem on the primary market; once the redemption clauses—like T+N, windows, suspension rights, or compliance reviews—are triggered, all that's left on-chain is a string of pretty balance numbers. When it comes time to actually cash out, it’s painfully slow.
And when something goes wrong, everyone reverts to that same consensus of "waiting for confirmation": whether it's a cross-chain bridge being hacked or an oracle suddenly reporting an outrageous price, in the end, it's all about pausing, delaying, and waiting for manual intervention. If RWA hides these "pauseable/modifiable rules" in fine print, I honestly wouldn't dare to treat it as cash equivalents... it's a bit shady. For now, I’ll keep an eye on redemption clauses rather than TVL.