The tokenization wave is here, and this time Bitcoin might lead it. Institutions are preparing to move real-world assets like stocks and real estate onchain. Yet most of that activity still lives on Ethereum and Solana. Now, a project called Arch Network wants to change that.
After 18 months of silent development, Arch has surfaced with a platform designed to make Bitcoin productive. The team says it can unlock real yield and enable DeFi directly on Bitcoin’s base layer.
According to a statement shared by Arch Network, the project aims to position Bitcoin as the foundation of global finance.
Ted Pillows, a crypto researcher, wrote on X that institutions could prefer Bitcoin for tokenized settlements due to its neutrality and liquidity. He pointed to Arch as one of the few projects building this infrastructure before institutional demand peaks.
Arch’s pitch centers around a key problem: Bitcoin’s value remains idle. While it holds trillions in liquidity, it generates little productive activity. Arch’s system changes that by enabling programmable execution without removing liquidity from Bitcoin’s base layer.
The network introduces its own virtual machine built for Bitcoin’s UTXO model, allowing fast and composable smart contracts. Each transaction still settles directly on Bitcoin, driving miner fees and keeping value anchored to the chain.
This approach avoids bridges and wrapped tokens, which have historically fragmented liquidity and exposed users to risks. Arch claims its design aligns with Bitcoin’s trust model while expanding its capabilities for DeFi, lending, and real-world asset tokenization.
In a recent update, Arch confirmed testnet results with millions of executed transactions and hundreds of thousands of connected wallets.
Arch says the world’s biggest investors want yield on their Bitcoin holdings. Public companies and asset managers can’t justify idle balance sheets. With Arch, they could earn yield directly through base-layer activity instead of relying on synthetic wrappers or custodial products.
The ecosystem already includes early partners like HoneyB, which focuses on real-world asset integration, and Autara, a Bitcoin-based money market backed by firms such as Circle and Liquid Funds. Saturn, a decentralized exchange on Arch’s testnet, has also completed successful base-layer trades.
The network has raised $20 million, with an additional $40 million raised by ecosystem projects. It also onboarded more than 30 validators and key risk partners preparing frameworks for institutional entry.
As Ted noted,
Arch appears to be building toward that outcome, creating what it calls a Bitcoin-denominated economy.
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