A fintech firm originally founded in Albania and now based in Luxembourg, T-Blocks, has entered into a partnership with U.S.-based blockchain company Ripple to bring real-world asset tokenization to the XRP Ledger network. The collaboration is intended to enable digital representations of financial assets held by T-Blocks’ Luxembourg fund so that investors can access and trade them through blockchain rails rather than traditional intermediated channels. The firm disclosed that close to fifty million euros worth of assets will be prepared for tokenized issuance as the first phase of the program.
T-Blocks was established in 2023 with a stated objective of connecting diaspora capital to investment opportunities in the Western Balkans, specifically in real estate and renewable energy projects. Earlier in the year, the company created a regulated fund structure in Luxembourg tailored for investors living abroad who seek exposure to infrastructure and property development in their region of origin but prefer to transact through compliant European financial vehicles. The tokenization initiative with Ripple is being positioned as a mechanism to lower friction, standardize access, and reduce barriers to secondary liquidity for those holdings.
XRPL Positioned as Infrastructure Layer for Tokenized Capital
Ripple has previously framed the XRP Ledger as a public blockchain optimized for enterprise-grade use cases in financial markets, including instant settlement, built-in compliance hooks, and tokenization functions designed to coexist with regulated institutions. Industry observers have frequently noted that XRPL offers deterministic settlement finality and has been engineered to support asset issuance natively rather than through external smart-contract layers. This architectural design is often cited as an advantage for real-world asset tokenization, where predictability, throughput, and auditability are critical for regulated participants.
The decision by T-Blocks to deploy on XRPL reflects a broader strategic move among tokenization platforms to align with ecosystems that already have traction in cross-border financial applications. Ripple has been promoting tokenization use cases as a logical extension of its earlier work in blockchain-based settlement and messaging, and has repeatedly highlighted that real-world assets could form one of the most commercially material layers of on-chain finance in the coming years.
Institutional Interest and Regulatory Tailwinds Lift RWA Demand
Over the past two years, the tokenization of off-chain financial instruments — including funds, credit assets, real estate, sovereign debt, and energy projects — has gained institutional traction. Multiple research groups have projected that tokenized financial markets may eventually reach a multi-trillion-dollar scale, with the strongest early uptake in Europe due to regulatory clarity created by frameworks such as MiCA. Against this backdrop, Luxembourg has emerged as a preferred jurisdiction for firms seeking to structure regulated funds with blockchain-enabled capabilities.
🚀 T-Blocks is building on the @xrpledger, one of the world’s leading blockchain platforms, to bring new investment opportunities to Southeast Europe.
As a recipient of an XRPL Grant supported by @Ripple, T-Blocks is expanding access to tokenized investments across the region.… pic.twitter.com/teBcjlZww8
— T-Blocks (@tblocks_io) October 28, 2025
T-Blocks’ fund, structured in Luxembourg but aimed at investors with roots in the Western Balkans, illustrates how tokenization can be deployed at the intersection of regulatory compliance, diaspora capital flows, and infrastructure investment. Tokenized issuance allows fund units to be fractionalized and traded digitally without requiring a traditional broker channel or cross-border paperwork, while still operating under a compliant European umbrella.
Tokenization Seen as Enabler of Liquidity and Transparency
Industry analysts following the partnership suggested that on-chain representation of fund assets could accelerate secondary trading activity, improve auditability, and compress administrative overhead for investors onboarding and lifecycle management. Supporters of RWA infrastructure have argued that these gains are most visible in niche or geographically limited capital markets, such as diaspora-oriented investments, where liquidity has historically been thin and distribution channels fragmented.
By launching the product stack on XRPL, the companies are signaling a belief that tokenized instruments will migrate toward chains with regulatory-aligned performance properties rather than generalized networks designed primarily for retail speculation. The T-Blocks and Ripple collaboration is being described as an early indicator of how regulated funds may begin shifting issuance and investor services to blockchain environments as institutions seek programmable, compliant rails for cross-border capital flows.
If successfully executed, the initiative could serve as a working model for other region-specific funds seeking to merge Luxembourg-based structures with blockchain-enabled market access.








