The Structural Digitization of Capital Markets
Market Structure Transition in the Era of Digital Infrastructure
Most discussions of digital assets focus on price, speculation, or the emergence of new asset classes.
That framing misses the shift.
Capital markets are undergoing a structural transition toward digitally native infrastructure—where the central challenge is no longer execution, but coordination across identity, liquidity, and regulation.
Why This Matters Now
Financial infrastructure is shifting from fragmented, analog systems toward programmable, digitally native environments.
This transition is not isolated—it reflects a broader re-architecture of how value is issued, transferred, and settled.
For institutions, the implications are strategic—not tactical.
What This Paper Covers
- Evolution of financial infrastructure toward digital-native systems
- Role of digital assets in market structure transformation
- Regulatory convergence and institutional adoption pathways
- Real-world asset tokenization and liquidity implications
- Strategic considerations for firms positioning early
Intended Audience
This paper is written for:
- Institutional investors
- Executive leadership teams
- Fund managers and allocators
- Operators evaluating digital asset integration
Strategic Clarity Precedes Allocation
Institutions navigating this transition face a critical challenge: separating structural signal from market noise.
Anderson One Strategic Group advises institutions navigating the transition toward programmable, constraint-aware financial systems