Global capital markets are undergoing one of the biggest transformations in decades, driven by advances in digital infrastructure, tokenization, AI, and regulatory evolution. The way capital is raised, moved, and invested is changing — from Wall Street all the way to the Gulf. Financial institutions, sovereign wealth funds, asset managers, and policymakers are helping shape what comes next. Joining me to discuss this and more is Christian Narvaez, founder and managing partner at Rayo Capital Group, a New York-based investment and advisory firm operating at the intersection of venture capital, capital markets, digital assets, and public policy. Chris, thanks so much for joining us today.
Thank you for having me.
You spent more than a decade advising institutional clients on Wall Street before launching Rayo Capital Group. What has fundamentally changed in the past two years that's accelerating institutional adoption of digital assets and tokenization?
The biggest change hasn't been the technology — it's been regulatory clarity. For many years, financial institutions understood the potential of blockchain technology, but they lacked the regulatory certainty and institutional compliance infrastructure necessary to deploy capital. Today that's changing, and it's changing fast. Bitcoin ETFs have opened the door for institutional participation. Stablecoins have grown to become a $250 billion market. Digital assets have become roughly a $2.5 trillion asset class.
When we talk about the Middle East, it has emerged as one of the fastest-growing financial hubs in the world. Why is the MENA market attracting so much institutional attention, and what can global markets learn from the developments there?
The MENA story is compelling because it combines three things that institutions value most: capital, regulatory clarity, and long-term vision. Markets like Abu Dhabi and Dubai recognised early that financial innovation requires regulatory certainty. ADGM and VARA are perfect examples of building a modern framework that gave institutions the confidence to invest, build, and scale. Combine that with patient, long-horizon sovereign wealth capital and globally connected financial institutions, and you have a very strong financial hub.
AI and blockchain are two of the biggest technological shifts happening today. How do you see these technologies transforming capital markets over the next decade?
People often separate AI and blockchain, but they're actually complementary technologies. PwC estimates AI can contribute more than $15 trillion to the global economy by 2030. As AI becomes more autonomous, it will need trusted infrastructure for identity, ownership, payments, compliance, and settlement — and that's where blockchain comes in. Together, these technologies will modernise how capital is raised, invested, traded, and settled across global markets.
Looking ahead, what trends will define capital markets over the next decade and what will be the biggest catalyst over the next 3 to 5 years, specifically when we look at the MENA markets?
The defining trend will be the tokenization of real world assets. More than $25 billion of real world assets have already been tokenised on public blockchains — US treasuries, private credit, money market funds, and multiple other sectors. Studies estimate that figure could grow into the trillions by the end of this decade. The next major catalyst will be institutional participation at scale. As custody, compliance, and regulation continue to mature, we'll see banks, pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, and family offices increasingly integrate tokenised assets into their portfolios.
I definitely want to talk more about the evolution of AI — it's taking over markets and pretty much everywhere we look. How do you think AI will play a part in capital markets, in MENA, and here in the US?
In general, it's optimising many industries and sectors. The world is changing and technology is advancing at such a rapid pace that it's difficult to see exactly what will happen in the next 3 to 5 years. But what we do know is that a major transformation is underway with AI and other frontier technologies like blockchain, and the combination of the two will drive that transformation forward.
Final question — five years from now, what do you think will surprise the financial world most about what's happening today?
Specifically on digital assets — I don't think the biggest surprise will be the growth of the sector itself. The biggest surprise will be that we stop calling them digital assets altogether. We no longer distinguish between internet companies and traditional companies. That same transition is coming for digital finance and traditional finance. Payments will become faster and more efficient, markets will be programmable, and capital moving across borders will simply be the norm.
Thank you so much for joining us, Christian. A pleasure to have you today.