BUIDL Adds Onchain Verification Layer
BlackRock’s USD Institutional Digital Liquidity Fund, or BUIDL, now has an onchain verification layer. Chronicle said its Proof of Asset system is now verifying the Securitize-tokenized fund onchain, adding independently attested visibility into BUIDL’s holdings composition and valuation data. The company said BUIDL currently has $2.1 billion in assets under management.
That makes this more than another tokenization headline. The real change is that BUIDL is being pushed from a tokenized fund into a more data-rich onchain product, where protocols, allocators and platforms can access verified fund data rather than relying only on offchain disclosure and trust.
BUIDL just gained a live verification layer
Chronicle says Proof of Asset continuously attests to the availability, freshness and integrity of BUIDL’s asset-composition and valuation data. It also says the Chronicle dashboard now provides real-time visibility into BUIDL fund holdings data.
That matters because tokenized funds are often judged on the quality of the wrapper, while the harder question is what users can actually verify underneath. Chronicle is trying to answer that by turning holdings-level information into something that can be checked and integrated onchain, not just read in periodic documents. This is an analytical read of the product design described in the release.
The bigger shift is from tokenized wrappers to machine-readable funds
Chronicle frames the launch as a step toward making tokenized funds more usable across onchain finance. The company says independently verified holdings-level data can help institutions unlock deeper onchain utility, support safer protocol integrations and open new distribution channels.
BlackRock’s head of digital assets, Robert Mitchnick, made the same point from a different angle. He said blockchains create an opportunity for real-time transparency that traditional market infrastructure cannot easily provide, and said Chronicle’s tooling can strengthen confidence and transparency for platforms and allocators seeking BUIDL data onchain.
In plain English, the announcement suggests tokenized funds may become far more useful once they are not only transferable onchain, but also continuously legible to onchain systems. That is the strongest news angle in the release.
Chronicle is selling verification as core market infrastructure
Chronicle is explicit about the role it wants to play. It says data oracles are a critical layer of infrastructure for tokenized assets and argues that verifiable asset-level data is now foundational for risk management, automated allocation, compliant distribution and real-time settlement workflows.
The company also says Proof of Asset is now securing $5 billion in total value secured. That figure is Chronicle’s own claim, but it shows how the firm is positioning itself: not as a peripheral analytics tool, but as a trust layer for tokenized financial products.
Why BUIDL is the right product for this test
BUIDL is one of the largest tokenized money-market-style products in the market, backed by short-term U.S. Treasuries, repurchase agreements and cash, according to the release. That makes it a meaningful proving ground for onchain verification because the fund already sits at the intersection of traditional collateral quality and blockchain distribution.
Securitize CEO Carlos Domingo said tokenization only becomes truly meaningful when investors and protocols can independently verify what is backing the product. That is effectively the thesis behind the announcement: the tokenized fund category is maturing from simple issuance into verifiable, data-driven financial instruments.
What still isn’t fully answered
The release explains the verification layer, but it does not disclose which onchain protocols are already using BUIDL’s verified data, how often third-party integrations are expected to update against the feed, or what new use cases may go live first because of the verification layer. It also does not spell out the commercial terms of using Chronicle’s infrastructure.
Why it matters for crypto
- It pushes tokenized funds beyond simple issuance and toward live, independently verifiable onchain financial products.
- It suggests the next phase of real-world asset growth may depend as much on verifiable data infrastructure as on tokenization itself. This is an inference based on Chronicle’s and BlackRock’s framing.
- It gives BUIDL a stronger foundation for use in onchain workflows that need trusted holdings and valuation data.
- It reinforces that oracle infrastructure is becoming a core part of institutional tokenization, not just a DeFi pricing tool. This is an inference grounded in the announcement.
What to watch next
- Which protocols, allocators or tokenized platforms begin using BUIDL’s verified data in live onchain workflows.
- Whether other large tokenized funds adopt similar holdings-level verification layers instead of relying only on offchain reporting. This is an inference based on the significance of the move.
- Whether Chronicle expands Proof of Asset support further across money-market funds, credit products and other institutional RWAs.
- Whether onchain verification becomes a baseline expectation for institutional-grade tokenized funds rather than a premium feature. This is also an inference from the announcement’s logic.