U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Commissioner, Hester Peirce, sought to draw a sharp distinction between regulated tokenized securities and synthetic crypto instruments as the agency moves closer to opening the door for on-chain trading of traditional financial assets.
In remarks, Peirce pointed to a January 2026 SEC staff statement on tokenized securities to clarify that the regulator’s emerging framework is aimed at digital representations of actual underlying securities rather than synthetic products that merely track stock prices.
The comments come amid growing debate over the SEC’s reported plans to create an ‘innovation exemption’ that could allow crypto platforms to facilitate trading in tokenized equities. Reuters reported earlier this month that the proposal would permit on-chain trading of tokenized versions of publicly-traded stocks under limited exemptions.
Peirce, who leads the SEC’s crypto task force, said any eventual framework would likely apply only to digital representations of securities already trading in traditional markets and not synthetic instruments created without ownership of the underlying shares.
The distinction has become increasingly important as exchanges, brokerages, and crypto firms race to tokenize traditional financial products, including equities, bonds, and exchange-traded funds, in pursuit of faster settlement and around-the-clock trading.
In its January 2026 statement, the SEC’s
defined tokenized securities as financial instruments already classified as securities under federal law but represented as crypto assets recorded on blockchain networks. The statement emphasized that tokenization does not alter the legal status of the underlying asset.
The SEC staff also outlined two broad categories of tokenized securities:
Legal analysts say the latter category has drawn particular scrutiny because some products may provide economic exposure to securities without conveying shareholder rights such as voting or dividends, potentially placing them under rules governing security-based swaps or derivatives.
The SEC’s guidance reiterated that federal securities laws continue to apply regardless of whether ownership records are maintained on traditional databases or distributed ledger networks.
“Tokenized securities are still securities,” the agency said in related remarks published last year.
The clarification comes as major financial institutions and exchanges accelerate tokenization efforts. In early 2026, Nasdaq received SEC approval for a framework allowing certain tokenized equities to trade alongside traditional shares, while the New York Stock Exchange partnered with Securitize on a proposed 24/7 tokenized securities platform.
Asset managers have also moved deeper into the sector.
Earlier this year, F/m Investments sought SEC approval to tokenize shares of its Treasury bill ETF arguing on-chain settlement could reduce costs and improve market access while preserving existing investor protections.
Supporters of tokenization argue the technology could modernize capital markets through instant settlement, fractional ownership and 24/7 trading access. Critics, however, warn that
could introduce new market risks.
“The tokens may not represent actual ownership of the company, and token holders may not get all of the benefits of a share, like voting [or] dividends,” said Daniel Labovitz, CEO of equity exchange platform, Green Impact Exchange.
“Another problem is fragmentation: when the same security trades in different markets that aren’t connected to each other, the price of the assets can diverge, meaning that some buyers will overpay for their token.”
Stay tuned to BitKE for deeper insights into crypto regulation globally.
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