For years, the most attractive yield and asset-backed opportunities in the Brazilian market have sat behind institutional infrastructure.
Private credit, receivables, trade finance, FX-linked flows and real-economy assets often carry operational complexity that keeps them out of reach for smaller investors and difficult to distribute at scale.
The mainnet launch of Rayls on April 30, 2026 is designed to change just that – not through promises, but through live infrastructure built for regulated asset issuance, settlement and distribution.
Real-world assets, not a launch demo
The strongest evidence for Rayls’ real-world asset strategy is the partner base already attached to the network.
AmFi is targeting $1 billion in assets under management on Rayls by the end of 2027, with $100 million committed by July 2026 and $500 million by January 2027.
The partnership is designed to bring alternative yield instruments on-chain through regulated infrastructure rather than leaving them locked inside private-market workflows.
Nimofast adds another tangible asset channel, focused on real-economy assets and cash flows.
Nuclea brings financial market infrastructure credibility, while XP Inc. and Nuclea are issuing stablecoins on the network.
Together, those organizations make the Rayls launch less about speculative future use cases and more about whether institutional asset activity can move onto public-chain rails without giving up privacy, compliance or operational control.
Why the chain’s performance matters
The chain’s infrastructure makes the retail experience practical rather than theoretical.
Transactions clear with verifiable sub-second finality, while gas costs are low enough to support high-frequency institutional activity without eroding the economics of smaller positions.
Fees are denominated in dollar-pegged USDr, giving institutions more predictable operating costs than networks where gas exposure is tied directly to volatile native-token pricing.
Rayls runs at more than 15,000 transactions per second and is fully EVM-compatible, meaning smart contracts can be built on the same Solidity tooling that powers the widest developer ecosystem in blockchain.
That matters for asset issuers because the barrier to integration is lower; institutions do not need to rebuild their entire developer stack to access the network.
The launch also brings RLS tokenomics live. The burn mechanism gives the network an economic layer designed to reflect usage as institutional demand grows across stablecoin issuance, tokenized receivables, FX flows and real-economy assets.
Institutional credibility behind the asset layer
The institutional credibility underpinning Rayls is substantial.
Tether made a strategic investment in Parfin, the company behind Rayls, in November 2025. Mastercard added the chain to its Crypto Partner Program in March 2026 alongside Polygon, Solana, Ripple and Stellar.
J.P. Morgan’s Kinexys division has deployed on the network and independently assessed its privacy architecture.
The Enygma Protocol, uses zero-knowledge proofs and homomorphic encryption to allow validation without exposing sensitive asset, counterparty or transaction data.
For regulated financial institutions, that is not a cosmetic feature. It is central to whether tokenized assets can move on-chain while still satisfying privacy, auditability and regulator-access requirements.
Permissioned Rayls Private Networks allow institutions to issue and manage assets in controlled environments while connecting to the public chain through privacy-preserving infrastructure.
That model is intended to let institutions keep compliance and asset governance at the originator layer while still benefiting from public-chain settlement, liquidity and programmability.
From institutional assets to broader access
The retail opportunity around Rayls depends on what partner institutions bring on-chain over the next 12 months, and how those products are packaged, approved and distributed.
But the important shift at mainnet is that the underlying rails are now live. AmFi, Nimofast, Nuclea and XP give the network tangible asset activity to build around, rather than relying on abstract claims about future tokenization.
For crypto participants who have watched institutional-grade yield remain largely inaccessible, Rayls’ launch offers a more concrete path, regulated issuers, real assets, privacy-preserving infrastructure, low-cost public-chain settlement and RLS tokenomics that are live from day one.
Whether the model scales will depend on delivery against partner milestones, the depth of institutional demand and the pace at which assets move through Rayls Private Networks onto the public chain.
But the infrastructure capable of handling that activity opened on April 30.
