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The Largest Securities Exchange in the World is Coming Onchain

The New York Stock Exchange—home to $44 trillion in market cap—is building a tokenized trading platform. This isn't a pilot or a sandbox: it's a regulated ATS set to launch in Q4 2025, enabling native blockchain-based equity issuance and 24/7 trading. Securitize has been named the first digital transfer agent, positioning tokenized securities as real equity, not derivatives or wrappers. Can trillions in traditional equities migrate onchain without disrupting two centuries of market structure? And will retail investors finally own their shares the same way they own their Bitcoin?

Durata del video: 1:06:33·Pubblicato 7 apr 2026·Lingua del video: English
9–10 min di lettura·12,546 parole pronunciateriassunto in 1,870 parole (7x)·

1

Punti chiave

1

Securitize will act as the first digital transfer agent for the NYSE, allowing issuers to mint blockchain-native equity that represents real ownership, not synthetic exposure.

2

The new NYSE-affiliated ATS will launch in Q4 2025, enabling 24/7 trading of tokenized securities versus stablecoins with instant atomic settlement.

3

Tokenized treasuries grew from $300 million to $11 billion in two years, the fastest growth in crypto. Even 1–2% of US equities onchain would add $2 trillion, doubling crypto's market cap.

4

Whitelisted wallets allow self-custody and seamless broker switching, while smart contract vaults enable DeFi integrations for lending and collateral without sacrificing regulatory compliance.

5

NYSE expects a 3–5 year migration timeline for mainstream tokenized trading, with retail adoption likely outpacing institutional. By 2036, tokenized volume will be material, not de minimis.

In breve

The NYSE is launching a tokenized securities platform in late 2025 where blockchain-native equity will trade 24/7 against stablecoins. Even capturing 1–2% of US equities onchain would double the size of crypto.


2

What is a Digital Transfer Agent?

Transfer agents keep the official shareholder ledger; digital ones use blockchain as the book of record.

Every publicly traded company or ETF must have a transfer agent—an SEC-registered entity responsible for maintaining the official cap table of who owns which securities. Most shares are held under DTCC, the central securities depository, meaning retail investors on Robinhood or Fidelity don't technically own shares directly; DTCC does. A transfer agent manages transfers, pays dividends, conducts votes, and handles asset servicing like reissuing shares if access is lost.

Securitize has been a registered transfer agent since 2019. The «digital» designation simply means using public blockchains as the ledger technology rather than traditional databases, and conducting all procedures electronically without paper certificates. The SEC has explicitly approved transfer agents using public permissionless networks to maintain the master security holder file—the official ownership record.

For tokenized securities to be true native equity rather than derivatives or IOUs, they must be issued through a regulated transfer agent. This ensures the token itself represents the actual security with full voting rights, dividend accrual, and legal standing.


3

NYSE's New Tokenized Trading Platform

🏛️
Alternative Trading System
The NYSE is launching a separate ATS (alternative trading system) adjacent to traditional exchanges. It will use offchain matching with NYSE's existing technology but onchain atomic settlement, conforming to SEC and FINRA market structure conventions.
🔗
Blockchain Interoperability
The platform runs a private permissioned core ledger that accepts tokenized securities from digital transfer agents or DTC. It supports broad interoperability with EVM-compatible chains, Solana, Avalanche, and multiple Genius-compliant stablecoins.
24/7 Instant Settlement
Unlike traditional exchanges with market hours and T+1 settlement, the ATS will operate continuously with instant atomic settlement. Broker dealers custody tokens on the platform, enabling prefunded trading and immediate sale execution versus stablecoins.
🚀
Q4 2025 Launch
Subject to regulatory approval, the platform expects to go live in late 2025. Issuers can begin native onchain issuance with Securitize immediately; those products become eligible for trading once the ATS is approved.

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Native Tokenization Versus Synthetic Products

True tokenized equity grants actual ownership and rights; derivatives introduce counterparty risk and fragmentation.

NATIVE TOKENIZATION
Real Equity on Public Blockchains
Securitize issues tokens through a regulated transfer agent that represent the actual security—complete with voting rights, dividend accrual, and legal standing. These are not IOUs or wrapped products. Issuers choose which public blockchain (Ethereum, Solana, Avalanche, L2s) to mint on. Because the token is the equity, there's no counterparty risk and no fragmentation: one canonical version exists, matching the traditional share class structure. Investors can self-custody in whitelisted wallets and move assets between broker dealers instantly.
SYNTHETIC DERIVATIVES
Offshore Wrappers and Perps
Platforms like Mowa and others issue derivative products that track equity prices but don't represent actual ownership. These introduce counterparty risk, often block US investors, and create fragmentation—six different «tokenized Coinbase» products may exist, each with different rights, pricing discrepancies, and no obligation to track corporate actions like splits. Perpetuals (perps) offer price exposure and are complementary to spot markets, but also carry funding rate risk and liquidation risk, serving a different trader audience rather than long-term equity holders.

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How Self-Custody Works for Securities

Whitelisted wallets allow self-custody and portability while maintaining KYC and regulatory compliance.

1

Connect and Verify Your Wallet Investors connect their wallet to the transfer agent's platform using standard wallet-connect protocols. The transfer agent verifies ownership by requesting a small transaction or signature, confirming the investor controls the private keys.

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Complete KYC Whitelisting The transfer agent performs KYC on the investor and whitelists the wallet address. This is a one-time process. Once whitelisted, the wallet can receive any tokenized security issued by that transfer agent, regardless of issuer or blockchain.

3

Receive and Custody Tokens Tokenized securities are minted to the investor's whitelisted wallet. The investor has self-custody and full control, but the transfer agent maintains the official ownership record linking the wallet address to the investor's legal identity.

4

Move Between Brokers Instantly To switch broker dealers, the investor simply connects the same whitelisted wallet to a new broker. The securities instantly appear in the new account without transfer delays, paperwork, or fax machines—a stark contrast to traditional equity transfers.

5

Recover Lost Keys via Transfer Agent If an investor loses access to their wallet, they contact the transfer agent. After identity verification, the transfer agent burns the tokens on the lost wallet and remints them to a new whitelisted wallet. This is not a bearer asset—ownership is legally tied to identity, not solely possession.


6

Public Blockchains Are SEC-Approved

The SEC explicitly permits transfer agents to use public permissionless networks for shareholder records.

💡

Public Blockchains Are SEC-Approved

A few months ago, the SEC published an FAQ explicitly stating that transfer agents are allowed to use public permissionless blockchains to maintain the master security holder file—the official cap table. This settled a longstanding debate about whether regulated securities could sit on open networks like Ethereum. Some academics argue private chains are safer, but the regulator disagrees. Public infrastructure enables open innovation and composability, just as the internet eclipsed closed networks like AOL. The transfer agent still provides the regulatory intermediary layer—managing KYC, burn-and-remint recovery, and compliance—while the ledger itself benefits from the decentralization and transparency of public chains.


7

DeFi Integration: Lending and Collateral

Tokenized equities can integrate with DeFi lending protocols through whitelisted vaults and liquidators.

Integrating tokenized securities with DeFi lending protocols is more straightforward than many assume. Two paths exist. First, protocols like Aave have built separate marketplaces (e.g., Aave Horizon) specifically designed to accept tokenized securities as collateral. These include hooks for permissioned assets, allowing investors to post tokenized Exxon shares and borrow stablecoins, with liquidators pre-whitelisted to handle defaults.

Second, Securitize has released a «vault register» technology that any DeFi protocol can integrate. The vault holds collateral without changing ownership—the investor remains the legal owner until liquidation. When liquidation occurs, the liquidator (a pre-whitelisted, KYC'd institutional entity) takes possession. This doesn't require rebuilding the protocol; it's a modular addition. Protocols like Euler, Loopscale, and Zarta are integrating this vault model.

This unlocks massive opportunity. Stock lending today is opaque and inefficient—prime brokers charge borrowers 35% and pay lenders 3%. Retail investors can't easily borrow against appreciated equity portfolios to buy a house; brokers offer margin loans for more trading, but not general-purpose liquidity. Tokenized equities on DeFi rails make collateral portable, transparent, and accessible, creating markets that don't exist efficiently today.


8

The Growth of Real World Assets

Tokenized treasuries grew from $300M to $11B in two years, the fastest segment in crypto.

Tokenized Treasury Market Size (Two Years Ago)
$300 million
The tokenized treasury space was nascent, with Bidd and a handful of products.
Tokenized Treasury Market Size (Today)
$11 billion
This represents the fastest growth of any segment in crypto over the past two years, outpacing stablecoins and far exceeding general crypto market performance.
NYSE Market Cap
$44 trillion
The New York Stock Exchange lists 2,400 companies with a combined market capitalization of $44 trillion.
Global Equity Market Cap
~$100 trillion
US equities represent approximately $60 trillion of the global $100 trillion equity market.
Crypto Market Impact of 1–2% Tokenization
$2 trillion
If just 1–2% of US equities move onchain, it would add $2 trillion—doubling the current size of the entire crypto market.
Bidd Market Size (Today)
$2.3 billion
BlackRock's Bidd remains the largest single tokenized treasury product.

9

Why Issuers Will Tokenize

Tokenization offers provable ownership, deeper retail access, and new shareholder engagement tools with no downside.

Before the NYSE ATS announcement, issuer conversations centered on «what can we actually do with tokenized equity?» Now, the answer is concrete: securities will trade on a regulated, liquid venue with 24/7 access and instant settlement. Issuers gain tangible benefits. Retail participation increases liquidity and valuation. Tokenized shares enable provable ownership: an investor can cryptographically prove they hold Apple stock, something impossible today with broker-held shares under DTCC. This unlocks creative shareholder engagement—issuers could offer discounts, event access, or loyalty rewards verifiable onchain.

CFOs and investor relations teams get real-time, transparent cap table visibility. Today, they rely on delayed filings and intermediaries. With tokenized equity, they can see buying and selling activity instantly (though institutional investors will still seek to obfuscate for competitive reasons). There's no meaningful downside: issuers don't sacrifice existing liquidity or market structure. Tokenization is additive.

The migration will follow the IPO retail tranche playbook. Five years ago, only Robinhood offered retail IPO access; now, every IPO includes a retail allocation, and SpaceX is rumored to allocate 30% of a $40 billion IPO to retail. Similarly, one tech-forward issuer will tokenize, then five, then 100, then it becomes standard practice.


10

Timeline and Regulatory Landscape

📅
Q4 2025 Launch
The NYSE's tokenized ATS expects regulatory approval and launch in late 2025. Issuers can begin minting native tokenized equity with Securitize immediately; those products become tradeable once the platform is live.
⚖️
No Legislative Dependency
The NYSE and Securitize can proceed with full tokenization using existing securities law. The Clarity Act would benefit crypto broadly by distinguishing securities from commodities, but tokenized equities are clearly securities and don't rely on new legislation.
🏦
DTC Tokenization Rollout
The Depository Trust Company (DTC) has announced plans to make all securities available for tokenization conversion over time, starting with the Russell 1000 index. This enables tokenization of traditional equities even without active issuer participation.
📈
3–5 Year Mainstream Adoption
The NYSE expects tokenized trading to become material within 3–5 years, with retail adoption outpacing institutions. By 2036, tokenized volume will be significant, not de minimis. Traditional exchanges are already extending to 23-hour trading as a precursor to 24/7.

11

«We're at the End of the Beginning»

SEC Chair Paul Atkins declared tokenization past its infancy; real growth is just starting.

Last week, SEC Chair Atkins in his speech said we're at the end of the beginning. So it kind of feels that way for tokenization—that we're at the end of the beginning. Now the beginning has happened. Now we need to get into the real growth, because the space is so massive. Just taking 1% or 2% of stocks onchain doubles the size of crypto. The fact that we have tens of billions of dollars still feels like very, very early days.

Carlos Domingo


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Titoli menzionati

BUIDLBlackRock USD Institutional Digital Liquidity Fund

13

Persone

Carlos Domingo
CEO, Securitize
guest
Michael Blaugrund
Executive, New York Stock Exchange
guest
Ryan Sean Adams
Host, Bankless
host
David Hoffman
Co-host, Bankless
mentioned
Paul Atkins
SEC Chair
mentioned
Gary Gensler
Former SEC Chair
mentioned
Jeff Sprecher
CEO, Intercontinental Exchange (parent of NYSE)
mentioned
Austin Campbell
Professor, NYU Stern
mentioned

Glossario
ATS (Alternative Trading System)A regulated trading venue that operates outside traditional stock exchanges but must comply with SEC and FINRA rules; allows for different operational models like 24/7 trading.
Transfer AgentAn SEC-registered entity responsible for maintaining the official cap table (shareholder ledger) of a publicly traded company or fund, managing transfers, dividends, votes, and asset servicing.
DTCC (Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation)The central securities depository for US equities; most shares held by retail investors are legally owned by DTCC on behalf of broker dealers, not by individuals directly.
Whitelist (in securities context)A compliance mechanism where a wallet address is KYC'd and approved by a transfer agent to hold tokenized securities, enabling self-custody while maintaining regulatory compliance.
Master Security Holder FileThe official legal record of all shareholders maintained by a transfer agent; the SEC has approved using public blockchains as this record for tokenized securities.

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