When Memecoins Rule Robinhood Chain, Where Do Tokenized Stocks Stand?

Robinhood Chain, the blockchain network built by the popular trading app to power tokenized stocks, has emerged as one of the most active new chains in crypto. However, instead of the company's intended focus on real-world assets (RWAs), a cat-themed memecoin called CASHCAT surged 2,158% over seven days, reaching a $156 million market cap, dwarfing the $12.81 million total value of tokenized real-world assets on the chain. Of this, $10.68 million represents stocks, with the remainder split across commodities, tokenized ETFs, and a $410,000 slice of U.S. Treasuries.
The network's explosive growth since its July 1 launch saw total value locked (TVL) hit $135 million, a sevenfold increase from $17 million, according to DefiLlama. It ranked among the top three networks for decentralized exchange (DEX) trading volume, generating $3.1 billion in activity. Built on Arbitrum's Orbit stack as an Ethereum Layer-2 solution, the chain settles transactions on Ethereum and uses ether for fees. Its flagship product, Stock Tokens, offers onchain versions of equities like Nvidia and Apple, but Dune Analytics data reveals that RWA activity accounts for just 4.1% of TVL.
Asset management dominates with 40.5%, lending follows at 38.3%, spot exchanges at 11.9%, and perpetual futures at 5.2%. The CASHCAT phenomenon has spawned an ecosystem of Robinhood-themed tokens, including Little John, Hoodrat, and Arrow, while stablecoins like Global Dollar (USDG) ($200 million) and Ethena's USDe dominate the chain's $299 million stablecoin market cap.
This speculative-driven activity mirrors the trajectory of Base, Coinbase's Layer-2 network, where meme coins initially overshadowed long-term applications. Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev acknowledged the memecoin trend, stating the chain 'works great for memes too,' but emphasized RWAs as the 'durable direction.' The critical question remains whether the chain can transition from speculative frenzy to institutional-grade financial infrastructure, or risk becoming another cautionary tale in crypto's cycle of hype and abandonment.