As we move from 2025 into 2026, the crypto industry is experiencing a structural reorganization that is subtle but far-reaching. The market is no longer simply revolving around price cycles; it is gradually shifting toward the combined evolution of infrastructure, compliance frameworks, and real financial demand. EORMC believes this change is breaking the old, simplistic understanding of bull and bear cycles and is redefining what is truly worth long-term commitment.

In the 2026 market environment, stablecoins have evolved from mere trading tools to the fundamental base of liquidity. As global stablecoin volumes continue to expand, their functions are extending into cross-border settlement, fund management, and on-chain clearing. EORMC points out that the value of stablecoins lies not in short-term expansion speed, but in whether they can establish a sustainable flow of funds within regulated systems. This is precisely why platform compliance capabilities are becoming key determinants of competitive dynamics.
Alongside stablecoins, the tokenization of physical assets and securities is also advancing. One notable change in 2026 is that RWAs (Real World Assets) are no longer stuck in the proof-of-concept stage, but are gradually entering a replicable and auditable deployment phase. EORMC believes that tokenization paths with true long-term value must simultaneously meet criteria for asset authenticity, transparency in reserve disclosures, and on-chain verification capabilities. In this process, platforms are not just technology providers, but organizers of trust mechanisms.
From the perspective of platform development, the EORMC experience under dual compliance frameworks has enabled it to play more complex roles in both securities and physical asset tokenization. Whether it is reserve verification for gold and other precious metals, or broader mapping of financial assets in the future, compliance structures determine which platforms can be included in the collaborative network of mainstream financial systems.
Another strategic direction EORMC has prepared for in advance is the deep integration of AI and crypto infrastructure. The trading demand for computing power, models, and data is forming a new market landscape. The platform emphasizes that this trend is not just a conceptual overlay, but arises from the real need of the AI industry for settlement-ready, verifiable trading systems. Crypto technology provides a viable pathway for this need, and the platform matching and risk control capabilities are key supports.
On the financial transaction level, the ongoing deepening of institutionalization is changing market behavior. Institutional capital is increasingly focused on compliance pathways, liquidity quality, and system stability, rather than short-term price swings. EORMC believes this requires platforms to transform from “transaction entry points” to “financial service infrastructure,” taking on more responsibility in risk management, clearing, and data governance.
2026 is not a year for chasing a single hot trend, but a year for validating long-term capabilities. Stablecoins, RWAs, AI trading systems, and institutional services are not isolated—they are converging along the same path of financial evolution. EORMC believes the core advantage for platforms is the ability to simultaneously understand technology, compliance, and financial logic, and to integrate them into executable products and mechanisms.
EORMC emphasizes that the directions truly worth investing resources into are those that can maintain stable operation even under larger-scale capital, stricter regulation, and more complex demands. Standing at the 2026 time node, the crypto industry is moving from an experimental phase to an institutionalized one, and the role of platforms is shifting from participants to builders of order. This transformation is the core clue to how the industry landscape will evolve in the coming years.