Hong Kong–based Flow Capital Partners plans to move its $150 million private credit master fund onto Singapore’s DigiFT blockchain platform by the end of this month. The fund first launched in June 2025 and invests in private credit deals for institutional and professional investors.
By putting the fund on DigiFT, Flow Capital will issue tokenized shares that represent claims on the underlying assets. Investors will be able to subscribe using fiat or stablecoins, with positions recorded on-chain instead of only in traditional fund registers.
Chief Investment Officer Jacky Tian says the firm aims to raise an additional $30 million through these tokenized shares by year‑end. Flow Capital’s broader goal is to scale the strategy to $250 million in assets by the end of 2026.
Why Flow Capital Picked a MAS-Regulated Blockchain Platform
Flow Capital selected DigiFT Tech Pte., a Singapore‑based platform regulated by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), to host the tokenized fund. DigiFT specializes in real‑world asset (RWA) tokenization, including a previously announced on‑chain version of a $6.3 billion Invesco private credit fund.
DigiFT operates a permissioned blockchain and a regulated exchange venue, enabling investors to subscribe to and redeem tokenized fund units under capital markets rules. That structure lets Flow Capital tap on‑chain liquidity while keeping investor onboarding, KYC, and custody inside an established regulatory framework.
According to Bloomberg, Flow Capital will be one of the first Asian asset managers to use DigiFT to capture growing demand from investors holding stablecoins who want access to private credit yields.
How Tokenization Reshapes Access to the Flow Capital Fund
Private credit funds are usually illiquid and hard to access, with high minimums and long lockups. By tokenizing its fund, Flow Capital aims to reduce ticket sizes, streamline subscription processes, and create clearer, real‑time on-chain records of ownership.
Tokenization itself does not automatically turn the fund into a fully liquid product. However, DigiFT’s secondary trading framework can make it easier for qualified investors to trade tokenized shares during allowed windows, compared with traditional private placement paperwork.
Flow Capital says the shift should also improve operational efficiency, since on‑chain records can automate parts of reconciliation, transfer agency, and reporting. For investors, viewing their fund units alongside other digital assets in a wallet‑like interface could make private credit feel more accessible.
Flow Capital’s move comes as on‑chain real‑world assets pass roughly $58 billion in market capitalization, with Ethereum‑based tokenization growing about 200% year‑over‑year.
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