- The SEC is expected to release its “innovation exemption” for tokenized stocks as soon as this week, creating a regulatory framework for trading digital versions of publicly listed shares.
- In a surprise move, the SEC is leaning toward allowing third-party tokens — created without the consent of the companies whose shares they track — to trade on decentralized finance (DeFi) platforms.
- The exemption carves out DeFi platforms from parts of the standard equity-market regulatory framework, raising concerns about market fragmentation, investor protection, and pricing transparency.
- Industry groups including Citadel Securities and SIFMA have pushed back, warning that broad exemptions could weaken KYC, AML, and other core market safeguards.
What Happened?
The Securities and Exchange Commission, under Chairman Paul Atkins, is preparing to release an innovation exemption that would allow the creation and trading of tokenized versions of publicly listed stocks — including by third parties who have no relationship with the underlying companies. These tokens, which would trade on decentralized finance platforms rather than regulated exchanges, would not necessarily carry voting rights or dividend entitlements. Platforms that fail to disclose that would lose the right to list the tokens under the proposed framework. The move comes as traditional stock exchanges including the NYSE and Nasdaq are also building tokenization infrastructure, and follows the Senate Banking Committee’s advancement of the Clarity Act, a landmark crypto market structure bill.
Why It Matters?
Allowing third parties to tokenize Apple or Amazon shares without issuer involvement creates the theoretical possibility of unlimited parallel wrappers for the same underlying stock — each trading on different venues, with different settlement rails, different protections, and potentially different prices. The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association has warned this could fragment the stock market and create disorderly pricing. Former SEC trading division head Brett Redfearn noted that without the issuer at the table, there is no limit on how many versions of a company’s shares could exist simultaneously. Several DeFi platforms targeted by hacks this year have already lost hundreds of millions of dollars, underscoring the infrastructure risks in the space where these tokens would trade. Some SEC commissioners dissent internally from the direction.
What’s Next?
If the exemption drops this week as expected, watch for immediate responses from major exchanges, broker-dealers, and industry groups — some of whom will seek narrower carve-outs and others who will move quickly to launch tokenized offerings. The Clarity Act’s passage through committee adds legislative momentum to the broader crypto regulatory agenda, and the two tracks — SEC exemption and congressional legislation — will need to be reconciled. Internationally, European regulators under MiCA will be watching whether the U.S. framework sets a precedent, and traditional asset managers will need to decide whether to participate in tokenized equity markets or cede that ground to crypto-native platforms.
Source: Bloomberg













