DroppRWA, a specialist in real-world asset (RWA) tokenisation, is industrialising the transition of physical assets to the blockchain through a “regulator-native” approach. After securing $12.5 billion in mandates within its first six months, the firm is now preparing to bring approximately $3 billion of these assets on-chain in 2026.
Led by Faisal Al Monai, the Co-Founder and CEO of droppRWA, the platform moves beyond the traditional model of “wrapping” assets in digital legal layers. Instead, it embeds compliance and legal finality directly into the infrastructure. This strategy mirrors Al Monai’s previous experience founding SADAD, Saudi Arabia’s national payment rails, where he viewed infrastructure as a public utility rather than a private platform.
Solving the Oracle Problem
A primary hurdle for universal capital markets has been the “oracle problem”—the difficulty of feeding reliable off-chain data onto a blockchain. Al Monai explained that droppRWA addresses this by integrating directly with Saudi Arabia’s National Real Estate Registry (RER).
“The question is not just, ‘Can we trust the data feed telling us who owns this property?’ It’s also, ‘Does an on-chain transfer constitute a legally recognized change of ownership under national law?’” Al Monai said. By collapsing the ledger and the legal source of truth into the same system, the platform ensures that the token and the property title remain identical.
Intelligent Energy Assets
Beyond real estate, droppRWA is collaborating with EDF to develop a framework for automated carbon-credit verification. This partnership connects energy production data from solar and wind farms to blockchain infrastructure using SCADA (Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition) systems.
“For tokenization, SCADA informs data oracles, which in turn can be used to trigger smart-contract payouts and automated revenue distribution,” Al Monai commented. The monetization model for this energy infrastructure follows a three-tier structure: a one-time primary issuance fee, an annual platform fee, and per-transaction fees.
Global Portability and the Trust Stack
While the current scale is driven by the top-down alignment in Saudi Arabia, droppRWA is designed for international expansion. The firm utilizes a Domain Specific Compliance Language (DSCL) to ensure its framework remains portable across different G20 jurisdictions.
“Rather than hardcoding any single jurisdiction’s ruleset into the platform, compliance logic is encoded as modular, version-controlled rules,” Al Monai added. This allows the platform to update its compliance layer for specific markets—such as MiCA-governed European jurisdictions—without altering the underlying settlement or security architecture.
As the Kingdom explores a Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC), droppRWA’s Trust Stack
is positioned to interface with these emerging systems. Al Monai noted that such infrastructure will eventually allow payments and asset transfers to occur simultaneously through instant, atomic settlement.
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