R2: What exactly are the returns of RWA (Real World Assets)

1. Why Do We Need to Re-Understand “Returns”

In recent years, the on-chain world has severely simplified the understanding of “returns.”

Many users tend to focus on:

  • How high is the APY
  • How quickly are rewards distributed
  • Can they exit at any time

But in the real world, returns are always the result of risk, duration, and cash flow, not something generated out of thin air.

When allocating funds to real-world assets (RWA), the core question is never:

“Can you give me a return figure?”

Instead, it’s:

  • Where does this return come from
  • How long is the asset duration
  • Is redemption clear
  • In extreme cases, can the mechanism still function

R2 aims to bring these questions back to the table.

2. What Assets Mainly Generate Returns in the Real World

In traditional finance, stable and explainable returns mainly come from a few types of assets:

1. U.S. Treasuries

  • Very low risk
  • Transparent yields
  • Best liquidity
  • But limited long-term yields

They serve more as an anchor for returns rather than an amplifier.

2. Corporate Credit Assets

  • Including short-term corporate bonds, senior loans, trade finance, etc.

  • Yields higher than Treasuries

  • Risks depend on:

    • Duration
    • Collateral structure
    • Borrower quality

These assets form the core of most “medium risk, medium return” portfolios.

3. Regional and Structured Cash Flow Assets

  • Latin America, Asia, SME financing
  • Supported by real operating cash flows
  • Stricter requirements for duration and redemption

These assets are not suitable for “anytime entry and exit,” but under a clear structure, they can provide stable returns.

3. After RWA Goes On-Chain, What Are the Real Issues?

Many think the problem with RWA is that the assets are not good enough. But in actual contact, we find the opposite.

RWA does not lack assets; it lacks usability.

The real issues mainly focus on:

  • Mismatch between asset duration and user expectations
  • Unclear redemption rules
  • Inconsistent risk disclosures
  • Users don’t really know what they hold

This is also why many “seemingly good RWA products” ultimately struggle to be used at scale.

4. What Is R2 Doing

R2 is not a protocol “inventing returns.”

What R2 is doing can be summarized in three points:

1. Transform complex assets into understandable products through Vaults

R2’s Vaults are not about chasing extreme APY but focus on:

  • Short to medium-term assets
  • Clear redemption rules
  • Traceable cash flows

Making it clear to users:

What their money is doing.

2. Serving as the underlying yield execution layer, connecting the real world with the chain

Beyond Vaults, R2 is also doing a more foundational thing:

  • Collaborating with asset managers and issuers
  • Bringing real-world yields onto the chain
  • Providing standardized execution and settlement methods

This makes R2 not just a “front-end product,” but an infrastructure for yield execution.

3. Focus on implementable regions and asset types

Currently, R2’s underlying assets mainly come from:

  • The United States
  • Latin America (LATAM)
  • Asia

These regions have:

  • Clear legal and financial structures
  • Mature short-term credit markets
  • Existing real yield demand

5. Core Principles of R2

In all products and collaborations, R2 always adheres to a few principles:

  • Do not promise unexplained returns
  • Do not hide asset durations
  • Do not sell liquidity illusions as product features
  • Do not treat short-term incentives as long-term returns

Returns are not marketing buzzwords but the result of system design.

Final Words

Real-world yields are not a new concept; they have long existed within traditional finance.

What R2 is doing is not inventing returns but:

  • Taking existing, explainable yields
  • Presenting them in a more transparent, usable, and simple way
  • For users and end-users who truly need them

We believe that what truly matters is not “how high the returns are,” but:

  • Where the returns come from
  • How risks are constrained
  • Whether users understand what they hold in any market environment

R2 will continue to build products around these principles, rather than chasing short-term numbers.

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OrangeGeneralvip
· 12-17 03:01
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