The IPX Index tracks $13.4T in real-world assets across 30 IP-rich companies.
IPX at 277.6. +32% in 12 months.
It measures IP as a percentage of market cap — the cleanest signal of IP-driven value.
One sector is completely missing.
Securitize: 0.01% of the NYSE's $44 trillion equates to more than their entire RWA asset base. That is a normalisation frame, not a forecast. The same move introduced ETFs to pension funds. Watch for it in institutional Q2 decks. https://t.co/zA7zP2v2W0
Acquisition models that treat these as one asset type will misprice one or both. Pre-streaming, sync-dominant catalogue requires different terminal value assumptions than publishing with AI substitution exposure. The bifurcation is in the deals. The models have not caught up.
Songwriter publishing is an AI-exposed creative asset. Kobalt's opt-in licensing model with Udio, and Suno's bypassed copyright filters, are both eroding the exclusivity premium in publishing valuations — through authorised and unauthorised routes simultaneously.
Pershing Square's UMG bid is an LBO model with music as the collateral. Organic growth is one slide. When a major fund prices music cash flows as credit, catalogue yield premiums compress. Not because music is worth less. Because it is now priced as debt. https://t.co/A87P5HvsMF
5/ The legal frameworks are forming. The payment intent is present. The missing piece is the infrastructure layer that connects a specific AI output to a specific rights holder. That problem does not go away — it scales with every model that trains on music.
4/ This is the most commercially urgent argument for on-chain IP registries. Not ideology. Operational necessity. The industry cannot pay the right people even when it wants to, because there is no authoritative, queryable record of who those people are.
4/ Decentralised IP rails are most commercially necessary in an era of maximum consolidation. The problem doesn't scale away from the assets — it scales with them. The larger the portfolio, the more urgently it needs infrastructure the incumbent systems cannot provide.
3/ Concentrated ownership built on fragmented infrastructure is inherently unstable. It generates disputes, delays, and value leakage at scale — not at the margin. The size of the problem scales with the size of the portfolio.
$768M catalogue fund closed this month. Multi-billion publisher acquisition in same window. Multiple other catalogue transactions in motion. Institutional capital treating music IP as formal asset class. https://t.co/BxrKnNStlk
4/ On-chain settlement compresses that sequence architecturally. Not because it removes the intermediaries immediately, but because it replaces the accounting cycle with a shared ledger that all parties read in the same moment. The delay is structural, not inevitable.
1/ A streaming play generates a royalty. Here is the sequence it travels before it reaches a musician's account: DSP → distributor → collecting society → publisher → label → artist. Seven handoffs. None communicating in real time.
3/ This is not corruption or negligence. It is the consequence of an industry that built its infrastructure before digital settlement existed — and has never had a commercial incentive to replace it while the incumbents set the terms.