Injective launches institutional infrastructure page to onboard enterprises into onchain finance

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Injective has launched a dedicated Institutional Infrastructure section on its website designed to walk enterprises through the process of piloting projects, tokenizing assets, and deploying capital in controlled onchain environments.

What the institutional page actually offers

The new page outlines a four-step process for institutions: design pilots, launch in permissioned environments, tokenize assets with controlled access, and operate with institutional custody partners.

The compliance angle is front and center. Injective is highlighting KYC/AML-compliant programmable compliance, jurisdiction-based access controls, and fully configurable real-world asset markets.

On the custody side, Injective is leaning on partnerships with BitGo and Fireblocks. Both firms already custody billions in digital assets for hedge funds, asset managers, and corporate treasuries.

The platform also supports a native Real-World Asset module, letting institutions tokenize everything from debt instruments to commodities within Injective’s ecosystem. Paired with native Ethereum Virtual Machine compatibility launched in November 2025, developers familiar with Ethereum’s tooling can build on Injective without learning an entirely new tech stack.

The network under the hood

The blockchain reports over 2.94 billion onchain transactions processed to date, with a block time of 0.64 seconds. Ethereum’s block time hovers around 12 seconds.

The median transaction cost sits at $0.0001. Injective also claims over 500 onchain assets and a reported RWA volume of $6.8 billion.

The native token, INJ, serves as the backbone for governance and staking within the ecosystem.

Broader strategic context

This infrastructure page is part of a broader refresh of Injective’s platform, which now features dedicated sections for institutions, developers, and the community.

Injective established the Injective Policy Institute in July 2026 specifically for US regulatory engagement.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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