Inveniam Adds Element-Level Verification to $32B Tokenized Asset Market

What You Need to Know
- Inveniam partnered with Docugami to verify individual data points in tokenized real-world assets on-chain.
- DGML enables verification of specific figures from documents, like rent amounts or loan-to-value ratios, with tamper-evident timestamps.
- Tokenized RWA market grew from $14.1 billion in January to over $32.4 billion, outpacing document verification infrastructure.
- AI agents in private markets currently cannot independently verify underlying data quality feeding asset valuations.
Inveniam, a data infrastructure firm that anchors more than $200 billion in private-market assets on-chain, has partnered with Docugami to bring element-level document verification to tokenized real-world assets. The deal pairs Docugami’s Document Graph Markup Language with Inveniam’s NVNM Chain to create cryptographic audit trails at the individual data point level, not just the document level.
The distinction matters more than it might appear. Proving that a rent roll existed at a specific moment is already possible with basic document attestation. What DGML adds is the ability to verify a single rent figure extracted from a specific lease clause, or a loan-to-value ratio from an underwriting memo, and anchor that element on-chain with a tamper-evident timestamp. The tokenized RWA value has reportedly grown from roughly $14.1 billion in January to over $32.4 billion, but the underlying data quality problem has scaled alongside it: tokenizing a private asset is only as trustworthy as the documents feeding the valuation. Most of that document layer has remained unstructured and machine-unreadable, which means AI agents operating in private markets have been reasoning on top of data they cannot independently verify. Docugami’s CEO Jean Paoli co-authored the XML 1.0 standard and built DGML using open-source large language models and knowledge graph generation, requiring neither training data nor templates.
The architecture is already in motion. Inveniam launched NVNM Chain on May 7 as a Layer 2 on MANTRA, and the MANTRA acquisition signals that Inveniam was consolidating the full stack before announcing the Docugami layer on top of it.
What This Signals for Private Market Infrastructure
The Docugami partnership sits inside a larger consolidation play. Inveniam plans to acquire MANTRA, the regulated Layer 1 on which NVNM Chain runs, in a transaction expected to close by the end of this month, following a $20 million strategic investment in August 2025. What Inveniam is assembling is a vertically integrated attestation stack: document parsing, on-chain proof generation, and the underlying blockchain layer, all under one entity. For institutional participants in private credit, real estate, and infrastructure tokenization, that vertical integration either becomes a trusted standard or a single point of failure, and the market has not yet decided which.
The two companies have not announced a public availability date for the combined solution.
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