During our third Business on Ethereum Live In this session, the EEA brought together the key architects bridging decentralized financial networks and global credit systems. Moderated by EEA’s Redwan Meslem, the panel welcomed Merlin Egalité (co-founder of Morpho) and Charles Jansen (Managing Director, Head of DeFi Transformation at S&P Global) to discuss an impending transformation in institutional asset management.
Released before the next Vault Summit in New Yorkco-organized by Morpho and S&P Global at New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), The discussion highlighted why institutional interest has shifted decisively towards isolated risk modeling and customizable on-chain wrappers. Just as ETFs disrupted the mutual fund market decades ago, programmable on-chain vaults are structurally positioned to reshape the future of institutional portfolio design.
Moving from shared risks to isolated vault infrastructures
Early iterations of decentralized lending relied heavily on unified liquidity pools. While this setup provided simple user experiences for trading, it introduced serious systemic vulnerabilities. If a single asset in a pooled protocol suffered an Oracle exploit or malfunction, the entire capital of the pool was compromised.
To bridge the gap between traditional capital markets and decentralized protocols, the industry has completely redesigned its backend architecture. By separating the market accounting layer from the active risk management layer, infrastructure providers can now isolate threats transparently.
“If you put it all together… if one asset blows up, everyone is exposed… We realized this three years ago while building on lending pools, and we decided: if we really want to expand the DeFi space and attract more institutions, fintechs and new entities into this space, we need to isolate the risk. — Merlin Equality, Morpho
In this isolated setting, risks are outsourced to separate, non-custodial smart contract containers or vaults. Independent risk curators manage these vaults separately, allowing institutions and fintech companies to select their exact parameters, collateral rules and risk tolerances from top to bottom. A single company can simultaneously operate a conservative, low-yielding cash vault as well as higher-risk products tailored to specific customer profiles.
Institutional Demand for Risk-Rated Onchain Products
The grassroots appetite for on-chain yield has extended well beyond crypto-native assets. Major traditional credit instruments, tokenized money market funds, and asset-backed debt products are moving rapidly on-chain. However, one of the main obstacles to large-scale participation of asset managers is the complete absence of visible and standardized risk assessment frameworks.
Traditional institutions are eager to invest their capital, but compliance and risk management departments need reliable third-party assessments before moving into automated environments. S&P Global’s strategic expansion into digital assets, including stablecoin sustainability assessments and private tokenized money market ratings, directly targets these operational frictions.
“You have this S&P 500 available now on Morpho, tokenized with Centrifuge… I can have exposure to the price of the S&P 500 and I can get additional yield. That’s great. But one thing that no one can really answer right now is: what is the risk?… There’s absolutely no visibility on what kind of risk I’m exposing myself to… There’s not a very clear framework right now.” — Charles Jansen, S&P Global
Resolving this risk-related uncertainty involves resolving deep structural and legal questions, such as establishing clear parameters for smart contract audits and defining ultimate accountability between vault creators, custodians, and underlying infrastructure lines.
The massive customization of structured financing
The real endgame for institutional DeFi is not simply the wholesale tokenization of legacy assets; This is a native on-chain origin. Although tokenization of credit funds represents an important transition phase, it often adds fees on top of fees. Over the next five years, lending, general accounting, and structural trenches will migrate directly to immutable public protocols.
Once financial assets exist natively on-chain, vaults transform into highly customizable financial packaging. They unlock a capability that is incredibly difficult to achieve in traditional finance: seamless mass customization of investment portfolios.
“With vaults, you’ll be able to do that as tokenization evolves… You can start creating these packaged, custom vaults designed specifically for you… It’s the mass customization of portfolio creation, which is not that easy to do today… Vaults will probably disrupt the ETF in some form.” — Charles Jansen, S&P Global
Using advanced multi-token vault structures, a manager could easily aggregate equity exposure tokenized by an index, blend it with automated private credit returns, and anchor it with localized real cash flows, instantly creating bespoke portfolios perfectly suited to an individual client’s risk appetite.
Key Takeaways for Corporate Treasurers
- Implement risk isolation: Abandon pooled asset protocols in favor of isolated vault architectures to protect core corporate liquidity from contagion risk.
- Demand independent risk management frameworks: Require transparent and standardized assessments of third-party credit and structural risks before deploying institutional capital in on-chain yield products.
- Get Ready for Onchain Native Origin: Recognize that the tokenization of funds is a temporary phase; Long-term cost reductions will come from direct on-chain asset creation that minimizes intermediary fee levels.
- Leverage custom asset wrappers: Evaluate on-chain vaults as highly advanced programmatic alternatives to traditional ETFs, enabling real-time portfolio customization and unique return generation.

