Flow Capital Partners is preparing to bring one of its private credit funds onchain, adding another example of how tokenization is moving beyond pilot language and into live fund distribution.
The Hong Kong-based alternative asset manager plans to offer shares of its $150 million private credit fund through DigiFT, a platform focused on tokenized real-world assets. According to Bloomberg, the fund, which was originally launched in June 2025, is expected to become available onchain by the end of this month.
That matters because private credit has become one of the more closely watched corners of the tokenization market. The asset class already appeals to investors looking for yield outside public markets, and putting it onchain gives managers a way to test whether distribution, settlement and investor access can be made more flexible without changing the fund’s core economics.
Flow Capital is not stopping at the initial migration. The firm is also seeking to raise an additional $30 million in tokenized shares by the end of this year, which suggests the onchain move is being treated as a live capital-raising channel rather than a symbolic side project.
That distinction is important. A lot of tokenization headlines still revolve around announcements. This one is tied directly to a fund already in operation.
Jacky Tian, Flow Capital’s chief investment officer, said the company wants to scale the vehicle to $250 million by the end of 2026. That gives the tokenization effort a clearer business target than many similar moves in the sector.
The broader signal is fairly plain. Real-world asset tokenization is no longer confined to Treasury products and short-duration cash instruments. Private credit managers are starting to test whether onchain rails can support more complex fund structures as well.
For the market, the question is less whether tokenized fund shares can exist. They clearly can. The more relevant question now is whether managers like Flow Capital can use them to raise capital efficiently enough for the model to stick.
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