
Brickken CEO predicts Wall Street on blockchain by 2030
The distinction between traditional finance and crypto will largely disappear by the end of the decade as blockchain technology becomes embedded throughout global financial infrastructure, according to Brickken CEO Edwin Mata.
Mata said Wall Street could be operating entirely on blockchain-based systems by 2030, with distributed ledger technology becoming standard infrastructure for settlements, payments and asset management rather than a separate industry category.
“The decision-maker is not going to be us anymore. It's going to be AI,”
Mata said.
The Brickken founder argued that terms such as Web3 and blockchain will gradually fade from everyday use as financial institutions adopt the technology behind the scenes and integrate it into mainstream fintech services.
Mata pointed to growing institutional interest in tokenisation, including initiatives such as BlackRock’s BUIDL fund and Bullish’s US$4.2 billion acquisition of transfer agent Equiniti, as evidence that capital markets are moving towards blockchain-native infrastructure.
He also criticised the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation, arguing that lengthy licensing processes and compliance costs favour established financial institutions while creating barriers for smaller startups seeking to enter the market.
Looking beyond tokenisation, Mata predicted that AI agents will increasingly automate asset onboarding, liquidity sourcing and investment decisions, eventually replacing traditional software dashboards with simple conversational prompts as finance becomes more automated and blockchain-based.