IMF: Tokenization Boosts Efficiency but Raises Volatility and Smart-Contract Risks
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has released a new explainer video on X outlining both the promise and potential perils of tokenized markets, marking the institution’s latest public-facing engagement with digital asset infrastructure.
While the global financial body acknowledged that tokenization can make markets faster, cheaper, and more efficient, it cautioned that these gains introduce fresh vulnerabilities — including heightened volatility, flash-crash dynamics, and the possibility of cascading smart-contract failures.
“Tokenization can make financial markets faster and cheaper, but efficiencies from new technologies often come with new risks,†the IMF said in the video posted Friday, framing tokenized markets as the next step in the long arc of monetary evolution.
Also read: Tokenization Breaking Free From Bitcoin Price Cycles as Wall Street Doubles Down
Tokenization’s Upside: Faster Markets With Fewer Intermediaries
The IMF’s explainer emphasizes tokenization’s ability to streamline financial infrastructure by automating core market functions currently handled by registrars, clearinghouses, and other intermediaries. Put simply: what previously required a chain of institutions across days or even weeks can now be executed programmatically within minutes.
That view aligns with the experience of some of the world’s largest institutional players. BlackRock’s BUIDL fund has rapidly become the world’s largest tokenized U.S. Treasury vehicle, surpassing Franklin Templeton’s Franklin OnChain US Government Money Fund as adoption accelerates across 2024 and 2025.
Binance recently added BUIDL as off-exchange collateral for institutional traders, further reinforcing the momentum behind tokenized capital-markets infrastructure.
IMF Flags Rising Volatility, Flash-Crash Risks
Despite the optimism, the IMF warned that efficiency can cut both ways.
Automated trading — a core component of tokenized markets — has “already led to sudden market plunges known as flash crashes,†the video noted. Those risks become magnified when smart contracts execute trades instantly and without human intervention.
In tokenized environments, a rapid price swing or liquidity shock could trigger self-reinforcing contract interactions. Smart contracts “written on top of each other†could behave like “falling dominoes,†the IMF said, turning what might be an isolated event into a market-wide problem.
The organization also raised concerns about fragmentation. As more platforms launch tokenized trading environments, the lack of interoperability could splinter liquidity, create silos, and ultimately undermine tokenization’s promise of seamless, cost-efficient markets.
Also read: Citi and DTCC Say Tech Is Ready for Tokenization—Regulators Aren’t
Governments Poised to Play a Bigger Role
Another theme in the IMF’s video: governments will not sit out this transformation.
“Governments have rarely been content to stay on the sidelines during important evolutions of money,†the IMF said, hinting that public institutions will likely take “a more active role in the future of tokenization.â€
Tokenization Enters the Mainstream Policy Conversation
Today’s explainer video marks a clear evolution in how the IMF communicates about tokenization.
The institution has spent years researching digital money and tokenized market structures, but publishing a public educational video signals that tokenization has graduated from a niche experiment to a mainstream policy concern.
Also read: The $100 Trillion Revolution: Tokenization Set to Redefine Global Finance
With tokenized assets now forming a multibillion-dollar industry, institutional adoption accelerating, and infrastructure maturing, the IMF’s message is clear: tokenization will reshape financial markets, but only under vigilant oversight.
While the organization acknowledges that tokenization could unlock a new era of programmable, instantaneous, and more accessible markets, it cautions that regulators must stay ahead of the curve. The efficiency gains are real — but so are the risks.

