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RWA (Real World Asset) is regarded as the core grasp for Web3 to connect with the real economy, but the three major pain points of "unclear ownership, unsafe funds, and difficult compliance landing" have always hindered its large-scale development. The person in charge of a supply chain financial platform under a state-owned bank said frankly: "Previously, we tried to promote accounts receivable RWA projects, but due to the inability to solve compliance verification and capital security issues, the project progress was slow. After accessing OmniPact's OES standard, these problems have been solved. Currently, the platform's RWA transaction scale has exceeded 200 million US dollars."
The complexity of RWA transactions far exceeds that of digital asset transactions. A complete accounts receivable RWA circulation needs to meet multiple conditions such as "valid creditor's rights, debtor's confirmation, regulatory filing approval, and fulfillment of payment commitments". These conditions involve both on-chain RWA certificate confirmation and off-chain enterprise confirmation and regulatory review. The traditional Web3 transaction model cannot realize the full-process verification, leading to potential risks such as false creditor's rights from time to time.
Aiming at the pain points of RWA transactions, OmniPact's OES standard has built a transaction framework of "full-process compliance + full-link verification". In the ownership verification link, the ownership certificate of RWA assets needs to be uploaded to the Omni-Link oracle through the interface of an authoritative institution, and written into the smart contract after encryption verification to ensure clear and undisputed asset ownership; in the compliance filing link, the system takes "filing approval" as the core performance condition by connecting to the regulatory filing system, and funds cannot be transferred if the filing is not completed; in the capital supervision link, all transaction funds are locked in non-custodial smart contracts, and funds will only be automatically released when all compliance and performance conditions are met.
The practice of the above-mentioned supply chain financial platform shows that the landing of the OES standard has technically guaranteed the compliance and security of RWA transactions. After small and medium-sized micro-enterprises convert accounts receivable into RWA certificates, they connect core enterprises and funders through the platform. Both parties to the transaction set conditions based on the OES standard, and the smart contract automatically completes certificate circulation and fund transfer. This model has increased the financing efficiency of small and medium-sized micro-enterprises by 5 times and reduced financing costs by 3 percentage points, effectively alleviating the capital turnover pressure of enterprises.
Industry insiders pointed out that the OES standard is promoting RWA transactions from "customization" to "standardization". With the connection of the OES standard to more national regulatory systems, RWA transactions will realize "global compliance and cross-border circulation", which can not only accelerate the integration of Web3 with traditional finance and physical industries, but also enable Web3 to truly empower the asset digital transformation of the real economy.
RWA (Real World Asset) is regarded as the core grasp for Web3 to connect with the real economy, but the three major pain points of "unclear ownership, unsafe funds, and difficult compliance landing" have always hindered its large-scale development. The person in charge of a supply chain financial platform under a state-owned bank said frankly: "Previously, we tried to promote accounts receivable RWA projects, but due to the inability to solve compliance verification and capital security issues, the project progress was slow. After accessing OmniPact's OES standard, these problems have been solved. Currently, the platform's RWA transaction scale has exceeded 200 million US dollars."
The complexity of RWA transactions far exceeds that of digital asset transactions. A complete accounts receivable RWA circulation needs to meet multiple conditions such as "valid creditor's rights, debtor's confirmation, regulatory filing approval, and fulfillment of payment commitments". These conditions involve both on-chain RWA certificate confirmation and off-chain enterprise confirmation and regulatory review. The traditional Web3 transaction model cannot realize the full-process verification, leading to potential risks such as false creditor's rights from time to time.
Aiming at the pain points of RWA transactions, OmniPact's OES standard has built a transaction framework of "full-process compliance + full-link verification". In the ownership verification link, the ownership certificate of RWA assets needs to be uploaded to the Omni-Link oracle through the interface of an authoritative institution, and written into the smart contract after encryption verification to ensure clear and undisputed asset ownership; in the compliance filing link, the system takes "filing approval" as the core performance condition by connecting to the regulatory filing system, and funds cannot be transferred if the filing is not completed; in the capital supervision link, all transaction funds are locked in non-custodial smart contracts, and funds will only be automatically released when all compliance and performance conditions are met.
The practice of the above-mentioned supply chain financial platform shows that the landing of the OES standard has technically guaranteed the compliance and security of RWA transactions. After small and medium-sized micro-enterprises convert accounts receivable into RWA certificates, they connect core enterprises and funders through the platform. Both parties to the transaction set conditions based on the OES standard, and the smart contract automatically completes certificate circulation and fund transfer. This model has increased the financing efficiency of small and medium-sized micro-enterprises by 5 times and reduced financing costs by 3 percentage points, effectively alleviating the capital turnover pressure of enterprises.
Industry insiders pointed out that the OES standard is promoting RWA transactions from "customization" to "standardization". With the connection of the OES standard to more national regulatory systems, RWA transactions will realize "global compliance and cross-border circulation", which can not only accelerate the integration of Web3 with traditional finance and physical industries, but also enable Web3 to truly empower the asset digital transformation of the real economy.
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