Is your gold really "within reach"? The geographical blind spots of custodial services behind tokenized gold
Most investors, when evaluating tokenized gold, typically focus on several familiar questions: How is the liquidity? What are the fees? Which blockchains are supported? How often are the reserve assets audited? These questions are certainly reasonable.
But there is a more fundamental question that is rarely asked: Where is the physical gold actually stored? What happens if someone really needs to withdraw it? This is not just a simple process issue, but a core premise that determines whether a tokenized gold product is truly valid.
Gold ETFs make it easier to participate in gold investment; tokenized gold, on the other hand, attempts to distribute gold in the form of individual gold bars and be used as physical assets in reality. The two seem similar, but they are not the same.
Many investors apply the logic of stablecoins when understanding tokenized gold. In the stablecoin system, the geographical location of custody is usually not important. The operation of USDT in Singapore, Switzerland, or São Paulo is essentially the same; the market is more concerned with the issuer's credit and liquidity network, while the specific location of the reserve assets is a secondary issue for most users. This logic holds because stablecoins are essentially a credit tool, supported by financial assets such as treasury bills, money market funds, or bank deposits, which have economic equivalence within the same category: a one-dollar treasury bond in New York is not fundamentally different from a one-dollar treasury bond in London.
However, tokenized gold is structurally different. Applying the cognitive framework of stablecoins to tokenized gold is a typical cognitive bias and a blind spot that the market has yet to fully recognize. Stablecoins can converge globally because credit itself has no boundaries; tokenized gold, however, cannot develop along the same path because physical gold does not work that way. When you hold a tokenized gold token, what you truly possess is a legal claim to a specific physical asset, located in a specific place, and governed by a specific legal system. You cannot separate tokenized gold from its geographical location as you can with stablecoins and their reserve locations. Geography is not an ancillary condition; it is part of the asset itself. The technological packaging of blockchain does not change this fact.
In other words, the "realness" of a gold token depends solely on which legal system you can enforce it in.
The Premise of Price Pegging: Arbitrage Mechanism, Not Technology Itself
The core promise of tokenized gold products is that their price can be pegged to the spot price of physical gold. However, this pegging does not happen automatically; it relies on an arbitrage mechanism to maintain it: when tokens trade at a premium, participants will buy gold from the spot market and mint tokens; when tokens trade at a discount, participants will redeem physical gold and sell it back to the spot market. It is this ongoing arbitrage activity that maintains the price peg. But the premise for this mechanism to work is that physical gold must be redeemable efficiently, quickly, and at an institutional scale.
If the underlying gold storage location does not align with the area of the participants, the arbitrage process becomes a cross-border operation: it requires handling document requirements across multiple jurisdictions, arranging international logistics, completing customs clearance, and coordinating delivery. When these processes are completed days or even weeks later, the price discrepancies that initially existed often disappear or persist due to high arbitrage costs.
Conversely, when participants are located in the same area as the storage location, the redemption path relies on familiar institutions, known counterparties, and existing settlement systems, making arbitrage feasible. Price pegging is essentially a result of arbitrage, and the efficiency of arbitrage depends on the geographical location of the asset.
Liquidity without redemption support does not constitute a complete market.
The credibility of a tokenized gold product's price peg fundamentally depends on the efficiency of its physical redemption infrastructure, and this efficiency is inherently geographical. Furthermore, this geographical difference directly affects the actual availability of the asset.
At the redemption level, whether the gold bar specifications comply with local market practices, and whether delivery times and costs are realistic, will directly determine the feasibility of arbitrage.
At the regulatory level, when institutions in Singapore or Hong Kong hold tokenized gold, compliance teams will inevitably ask: Where is the asset, who controls it, and which legal system applies? If the gold is stored in Geneva or London, the verification chain must cross foreign jurisdictions, which means higher complexity and uncertainty. The key is not which regulatory framework is superior, but which one aligns better with the interpretability and credibility needed in practical use.
In terms of collateral use, local financial institutions are more inclined to accept assets that can be verified and enforced under local legal systems. Locally custodied, locally audited, and assets embedded in local infrastructure are more readily accepted as collateral in practice.
Additionally, there is an easily overlooked but crucial factor: whether it is truly embedded in the local market system. Membership in regional precious metals market associations is not just a qualification label; it represents participation in local settlement, pricing, and trading networks. When an asset needs to serve as a real claim to physical gold, this embeddedness truly reflects its value, and this capability requires long-term accumulation, making it difficult to replicate in a short time.
Regionalization is Happening: Tokenized Gold Will Not Converge into a Single Global Market
Singapore and Hong Kong are among the regions with the highest concentration of global institutions and private wealth, and they have a deep structural demand for gold—whether as an asset allocation anchor, a store of value, or as collateral in financial structures.
But more critically, these institutions operate within specific regulatory, settlement, and legal systems. When they hold assets, they need to be able to interpret, use, and obtain those assets within the local system, rather than relying on complex chains that cross multiple jurisdictions.
Therefore, for Asian institutions, the geographical location of custody is not a secondary variable but a key difference that determines whether the asset can be truly utilized within the local system.
A product that stores gold in London or Zurich can be sold in the Asian market and may have liquidity, but it cannot fully replace products built for the local market—the latter has gold located in Hong Kong and Singapore, with a custody system embedded in local precious metals infrastructure and a local redemption path.
This difference may not be reflected in fees or liquidity data, but it will become apparent at critical moments: redemption, collateralization, regulatory audits, or during market pressure phases. It is precisely at these moments that whether the asset is truly "available" will be validated. As institutional participation increases, tokenized gold is unlikely to converge into a few global products, but is more likely to differentiate along different regions.
Stablecoins can converge globally because network effects can cross geographical boundaries; but gold is different. For institutions that require local delivery, regulatory documents, and legal protections, a gold bar in Singapore is not equivalent to a gold bar in London at the operational level.
The physical attributes of the asset determine that this difference cannot be completely eliminated by technology. Therefore, the regionalization of tokenized gold is not a choice but a structural inevitability.
The Real Question is Not "Is There Gold," but "Can You Access the Gold"
The value of gold lies in its ability to be genuinely obtained in extreme situations.
Tokenized gold extends this logic to the blockchain, but its effectiveness still depends on the underlying physical assets, including custody geography, legal systems, and redemption paths.
Many investors see "fully backed" and assume "fully accessible," but these two are not the same.
The question is no longer "Does this token have asset backing?" but rather: When the truly important moment arrives, can this asset be genuinely obtained in your market and your legal system?
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