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Tokenization startup Brix raises $5.5M to bring ‘institutional’ EM yield on‑chain

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Brix raises $5.5M to tokenize emerging‑market credit strategies on MegaETH, targeting “institutional‑grade” yield products that trade like altcoins with added credit risk.

Brix, a tokenization startup focused on emerging markets, has raised $5.5 million to bring what it calls “institutional‑grade” trading strategies on‑chain, extending a tokenization wave that already includes BlackRock’s BUIDL fund and Franklin Templeton’s on‑chain money market products. The new capital will fund the launch of Brix on the high‑throughput MegaETH network, where the team plans to package frontier‑market credit and structured products into ERC‑20‑like tokens aimed at global investors comfortable with both crypto volatility and emerging‑market risk.

According to Brix’s pitch materials, the $5.5 million round drew participation from Yapi Kredi’s venture arm FRWRD, Turkish manager Is Asset Management, Circle Ventures, ConsenSys and Borderless Capital, reflecting a mix of local EM expertise and global crypto infrastructure players. In a statement shared with The Block, Brix said it wants to “bring trading strategies traditionally dominated by large financial institutions on‑chain,” arguing that tokenization can lower minimums and increase transparency for strategies that typically sit inside private funds or bank balance sheets.

Brix targets EM yield as ‘altcoin‑like’ risk

A core part of the pitch is yield. Promotional material for Brix circulating on social media highlighted “real‑world high yields from emerging markets (like ~40% from Turkish sovereign rates)” as an example of the kind of carry the protocol hopes to route into DeFi portfolios, although those figures come with obvious credit and FX risk attached. The company argues that by wrapping exposures such as frontier‑market credit, trade‑finance receivables or EM structured products into fungible tokens, on‑chain traders will be able to treat them “more like altcoins with credit risk than pure beta,” opening relative‑value trades between tokenized RWAs and traditional emerging‑market debt spreads.

The move comes as large asset managers experiment with similar architectures at scale. BlackRock’s USD Institutional Digital Liquidity Fund, known as BUIDL, has grown into a multi‑billion‑dollar tokenized cash‑management vehicle backed by U.S. Treasuries and repos, while Franklin Templeton’s Franklin OnChain U.S. Government Money Fund has carved out an early lead in tokenized money‑market assets. As Fortune has reported, BUIDL has already expanded beyond Ethereum to multiple networks and is on track to surpass $2 billion in tokenized assets, underscoring how quickly real‑world yield products can scale once they plug into on‑chain rails.

For DeFi traders, Brix represents a more aggressive extension of that trend into higher‑risk, higher‑yield territory, where questions about governance, disclosures and how these instruments behave in stress will matter as much as the headline percentage rates. In prior crypto.news coverage of tokenized real‑world assets and the CLARITY Act’s treatment of stablecoin yields, tokenization has been framed as part of a broader shift to make bonds, credit and cash‑equivalents natively programmable on‑chain, a backdrop Brix now hopes to exploit with an emerging‑markets twist in this story, this story and this story.