

Securitize is making a move that, not long ago, would have sounded more theoretical than practical. The company plans to launch tokenized versions of stocks on-chain, pushing one of the most traditional parts of finance a little closer to blockchain infrastructure.
This is not about meme stocks or crypto-native experiments. Securitize operates squarely within the existing regulatory system. It has spent years working with asset managers, institutions, and regulators, quietly building the pipes needed to issue and manage digital versions of real-world assets.
That context matters. Putting stocks on-chain is not just a technical upgrade. It is an attempt to modernize how equities are issued, traded, and settled, without breaking the legal framework that keeps markets functioning.
Tokenized stocks are essentially digital representations of real shares, recorded on a blockchain. These are not synthetic products that simply track prices. Each token is designed to correspond to an actual share, with ownership recognized in corporate and legal records.
In practice, that means the blockchain handles transfer and settlement, while traditional systems still govern shareholder rights, compliance, and corporate actions. It is less a replacement of existing markets and more a new layer running alongside them.
The appeal is straightforward. Blockchain settlement is faster. Transfers can happen in minutes rather than days. Tokens can also be divided into smaller pieces, which makes fractional ownership easier and potentially opens the door to a broader set of investors.
It is not revolutionary on its own, but it is meaningfully more efficient.
Securitize has been focused on tokenization long before it became a popular narrative. The company already handles issuance, compliance, and transfer agent duties for tokenized funds and other financial products. Billions of dollars in assets have passed through its platform.
Because it operates with regulatory approval, Securitize has been able to work inside the system rather than around it. That makes its push into tokenized stocks feel less speculative and more like a logical next step.
If funds, bonds, and private assets can be tokenized, public equities were always going to be part of the conversation. The question was when, not if.
The strongest case for tokenized equities comes down to efficiency.
Settlement in traditional stock markets still takes two days. Blockchain-based settlement happens much faster, which reduces counterparty risk and frees up capital.
There is also the question of access. Tokenized stocks can, in theory, trade around the clock and reach investors beyond traditional market hours and geographies, depending on regulatory constraints.
Fractional ownership is another piece. Smaller units of stock make it easier for investors to gain exposure without committing large amounts of capital.
And once equities live on-chain, they become programmable. Compliance checks, dividend payments, and other corporate actions can be automated in ways that legacy systems struggle to match.
None of this guarantees widespread adoption. But for institutions that spend heavily on operational complexity, the benefits are hard to ignore.
None of this works without regulators. Stocks are among the most tightly governed financial instruments in the world, and tokenization does not change that.
Securitize’s approach has been to treat tokenized stocks as securities first. Identity checks remain in place. Transfers are restricted based on jurisdiction and eligibility. Corporate governance follows existing rules.
That conservative stance may slow things down, but it also makes the product usable for institutions that cannot afford regulatory uncertainty.
Around the world, regulators are moving carefully. Some are experimenting with blockchain-based trading and settlement systems. Others are still figuring out how digital records fit into long-standing legal definitions of ownership.
The progress is uneven, but the direction is clear. Tokenization is no longer being dismissed. It is being studied.
Securitize’s move fits into a broader trend across financial markets. Tokenization is spreading from pilot projects to real issuance. Bonds, private credit, and structured products are increasingly being brought on-chain, often with the backing of established financial players.
Stocks are different. They are more visible and more symbolic. Bringing them on-chain would signal that blockchain technology has moved beyond niche use cases and into the core of global markets.
That shift, once it starts, tends to be difficult to unwind.
There are still open questions.
Liquidity is a big one. Tokenized stocks only matter if there are enough buyers and sellers to create healthy markets. That takes time.
Interoperability is another. Bridging blockchain systems with legacy infrastructure adds complexity and introduces new risks.
And then there is trust. Investors tend to be conservative with assets as central as stocks. New formats have to earn credibility slowly.
None of these challenges are deal breakers, but they help explain why this transition is likely to be gradual rather than dramatic.
Securitize putting stocks on-chain is not a revolution. It is something more understated.
It suggests that the future of markets may be less about tearing down existing institutions and more about updating the infrastructure beneath them. Blockchain, in this framing, becomes a tool rather than a statement.
If that vision holds, tokenized stocks may eventually feel unremarkable. They will simply be another way equities move through the system, faster, cleaner, and mostly behind the scenes.
And that is often how real change shows up in finance.
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Kraken is making a major push into the tokenization market with its agreement to acquire Backed Finance, the company behind the xStocks product line.
This move gives Kraken full control over a growing category of tokenized equities and positions the exchange for rapid expansion as it prepares for a public listing.
Backed Finance specializes in issuing tokens tied to real world assets, mainly public company stocks and ETFs. These assets are backed by real shares held in custody, allowing users to hold digital representations of traditional securities inside a blockchain environment.
By bringing Backed Finance in house, Kraken gains control over the entire tokenization stack. Issuance, collateral, custody, compliance, and product architecture will all operate under one roof. This eliminates reliance on an external provider and strengthens Kraken’s ability to innovate and scale. The exchange has been building aggressively in Europe and other global markets, and the acquisition aligns with its larger ambition to make tokenized securities a core part of its ecosystem.
Tokenized assets have gained momentum as traders and institutions look for a more flexible way to access traditional financial instruments. The benefit is simple. Stocks can be traded on chain, around the clock, with global reach and fewer barriers.
Kraken’s recent capital raise brought its valuation to roughly twenty billion dollars. The company has been preparing for a public offering targeted for 2026, and expanding into real world asset tokenization helps diversify its revenue streams before going public. Backed Finance already holds meaningful market share in the tokenized equity space, which gives Kraken a strong foundation to build on.
The acquisition formalizes a partnership Kraken has spent the past year expanding. Backed has powered xStocks since launch, supporting products that have now generated more than $5 billion in cumulative trading volume on Kraken.
Interest in real world asset tokenization has surged through 2025, but the sector still faces challenges. Liquidity varies widely across tokenized securities. Some assets trade actively, while others see thin volume. This raises questions about whether tokenization alone can deliver deeper markets.
Regulatory frameworks are also evolving. Tokenized shares do not always offer the same rights as traditional equities, such as voting or regular dividend distribution. As more platforms introduce tokenized stocks, market fragmentation becomes a risk, since liquidity can spread across multiple chains and issuers.
These challenges do not diminish the potential, but they highlight the need for stronger standards, clearer rules, and well capitalized issuers.
Kraken’s acquisition signals that tokenized equities are becoming a long term strategic priority rather than a side experiment. If successful, Kraken could set the standard for a hybrid financial model where traditional assets move seamlessly across blockchain infrastructure.
BlackRock executives Larry Fink and Rob Goldstein recently said tokenization could reshape financial markets as profoundly as the early internet reshaped information.
Kraken's users may gain access to more global equities, greater flexibility, fractional ownership, and always available markets. Institutions may find a more programmable way to issue and settle securities. The industry may see a blueprint for bridging regulated markets with decentralized technology.
The path will not be simple. Liquidity, compliance, and investor protections will remain central areas of focus. However, Kraken’s move shows that major players believe the future of equities includes both traditional exchanges and blockchain based markets working together.
You can stay up to date on all News, Events, and Marketing of Rare Network, including Rare Evo: America’s Premier Blockchain Conference, happening July 28th-31st, 2026 at The ARIA Resort & Casino, by following our socials on X, LinkedIn, and YouTube.