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Enso Launches Real-World Assets App, Integrates With xStocks and Ondo

Enso Launches Real-World Assets App, Integrates With xStocks and Ondo

Enso, an onchain finance platform built for institutions, unveiled its real-world assets (RWA) app on Tuesday. The move comes paired with integrations with xStocks and Ondo, giving users access to more than 500 tokenized assets in one place.

Why the app matters

The company calls itself an execution and orchestration layer for institutional onchain finance. The RWA app is designed to tackle what Enso sees as a central problem in the space: fragmentation. Tokenized real-world assets — things like private credit, real estate, or commodities — have been scattered across different platforms and protocols. That makes it hard for big investors to move capital around efficiently. Enso’s answer is a single interface that can tap into a wide pool of those assets.

What the integrations bring

By linking up with xStocks and Ondo, Enso is plugging into two different corners of the tokenized-asset market. xStocks offers tokenized equities and bonds; Ondo focuses on tokenized U.S. Treasuries and money-market funds. Combined, the integrations cover over 500 tokenized products. For an institutional client, that means they can route orders across multiple providers without juggling separate logins or systems.

Who the app is for

Enso is not targeting retail traders. The platform pitches itself to banks, asset managers, and other large financial firms that want to operate on blockchains but need a reliable, aggregated layer. The RWA app is part of a broader push to make onchain finance look more like traditional finance — less manual, fewer intermediaries, faster settlement.

The company did not disclose how many users have signed up for the app since Tuesday’s announcement. It also did not say whether additional integrations are in the pipeline. What is clear is that Enso believes the future of institutional finance runs through tokenized assets — and that the current patchwork of platforms won’t cut it for big money.