Blockchain-Based Equity Markets and the Limits of Securities Regulation
The Securities and Exchange Commission appears increasingly willing to accommodate blockchain-based securities markets, including tokenized versions of publicly traded stocks. SEC officials have outlined potential pathways for tokenized securities trading, including an “‘innovation exemption,’ which will provide market participants with a cabined framework to begin facilitating the trading of tokenized securities on-chain . . . .” Meanwhile, traditional exchanges, crypto firms, and financial institutions are racing to bring stocks and other real-world assets on-chain regardless of the regulatory timeline.
For example, Coinbase, one of the largest crypto exchanges globally, announced on June 22, that it will begin offering pre-IPO perpetual futures contracts to allow non-U.S. retail traders to gain synthetic exposure to high-profile firms before they reach a public stock exchange.
Such developments present a significant policy question: how can financial regulators encourage innovation without undermining the investor protections and market stability that underpin the modern securities regime? That tension is especially acute where tokenized stocks may trade outside traditional market infrastructure, or where third parties sell blockchain-based public- or private-company shares without authorization from that company.
The SEC’s January 2026 Joint Staff Statement, issued by the Divisions of Corporation Finance, Investment Management, and Trading and Markets, again reiterated that tokenization does not alter application of federal securities laws. A tokenized security remains an “equity security” under the Securities Act and Exchange Act regardless of whether ownership records are maintained on-chain or off-chain. The Statement reflects what Commissioner Hester Peirce described as a “regulated evolution” approach—that is, tokenization changes the plumbing but not the regulatory foundation.
The Joint Staff Statement also highlighted the distinction discussed above between the two categories of tokenized securities: (1) those sold by the issuers of such securities; and (2) those sold by third parties unaffiliated with the issuers of such securities. Issuer-sponsored tokenization integrates distributed ledger technology into shareholder recordkeeping while preserving the relationship between issuer and shareholder. By contrast, third-party tokenization, may produce indirect claims, synthetic exposure, or instruments that merely track an underlying stock’s price and “may or may not confer upon the holder any rights as a holder of the underlying security.”
The investor protection concerns that flow from that distinction are substantial. A token marketed as a “tokenized stock” may not carry the voting rights, dividend entitlements, or inspection rights that accompany conventional equity securities. Synthetic instruments may additionally expose holders to counterparty and insolvency risks tied to the third-party issuer rather than the underlying company. Likewise, as Bloomberg reported, even SEC staff acknowledged concerns about how public companies could disburse dividends or count shareholder votes when tokenized shares trade pseudonymously across different blockchains.
Market structure concerns are of equal consequence. As envisioned, tokenized equities trading continuously on blockchains outside traditional exchanges could erode liquidity and price transparency. A similar risk raised by Citadel Securities in a letter to the SEC is that parallel markets could allow multiple tokenized representations of the same stock—i.e., issued by different third parties, carrying different rights, and settling through different mechanisms—to circulate simultaneously, thereby leaving investors unable to determine whether seemingly identical instruments represent equivalent economic interests.
The SEC has not signaled a departure from existing securities-law principles. Tokenization is not a mechanism for avoiding registration, broker-dealer regulation, or exchange oversight, and the Commission at least appears intent on fitting tokenized markets within the existing regulatory architecture even as it considers limited exemptive relief. The question is no longer whether tokenized equities will emerge within capital markets, but how regulators will address looming questions regarding ownership rights, custody, market structure, and investor protection.
Faruqi & Faruqi, LLP focuses on complex civil litigation, including securities, antitrust, wage and hour and consumer class actions as well as shareholder derivative and merger and transactional litigation. The firm is headquartered in New York, and maintains offices in Atlanta, Los Angeles and Philadelphia.
Since its founding in 1995, Faruqi & Faruqi, LLP has served as lead or co-lead counsel in numerous high-profile cases which ultimately provided significant recoveries to investors, direct purchasers, consumers and employees.
To schedule a free consultation with our attorneys and to learn more about your legal rights, call our offices today at (877) 247-4292 or (212) 983-9330.
Braeden Hodges is an Associate in Faruqi & Faruqi’s New York City office. Braeden’s practice is focused on Securities Litigation.