The US Securities and Exchange Commission has delayed plans that could have allowed trading of tokenized versions of US stocks.
This is according to a Bloomberg report published on 22 May, as regulators continue to debate how crypto-based equity products should operate under existing securities laws.
Bloomberg reported that the proposal faced internal concerns and industry pushback, slowing efforts to create a clearer pathway for on-chain stock trading products.
While details surrounding the delay remain limited, recent comments from SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce and a January SEC staff statement suggest the debate may center less on tokenized equities themselves and more on synthetic stock exposure products built on crypto infrastructure.
SEC appears to distinguish tokenized equities from synthetics
In posts published on X, Peirce pushed back against what she described as “hyperbole” surrounding the SEC’s contemplated innovation exemption for tokenized securities.
She said the framework was always expected to remain “limited in scope” and apply only to “digital representations of the same underlying equity security,” rather than synthetic products offering indirect stock exposure.
That distinction aligns closely with a January staff statement issued by the SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance, Division of Investment Management, and Division of Trading and Markets.
The statement separates tokenized securities into several categories, including:
- issuer-sponsored tokenized securities,
- custodial tokenized securities,
- and synthetic tokenized securities.
The SEC statement describes issuer-backed and custodial tokenized securities as structures tied directly to underlying shares and shareholder records. Synthetic tokenized securities may instead provide exposure through linked products or security-based swaps.
Tokenization may still move forward under tighter boundaries
The delay does not necessarily signal opposition to tokenized equities altogether.
Instead, the available guidance suggests regulators may support blockchain-based settlement and ownership infrastructure while remaining cautious about synthetic stock exposure products that resemble swaps or derivatives.
That distinction could become increasingly important for crypto exchanges, tokenization platforms, and brokerages pursuing real-world asset initiatives tied to public equities.
Companies across crypto and traditional finance have increasingly explored tokenized stocks as part of broader efforts to move trading, settlement, and ownership records onto blockchain networks.
At the same time, regulators globally have shown greater sensitivity toward synthetic exposure products that can create leverage, derivative-like risks, or reduced investor protections.
The SEC has not yet publicly outlined a timeline for revisiting the delayed proposal.
Final Summary
- Bloomberg reported that the SEC delayed plans tied to tokenized US stock trading amid internal concerns and pushback.
- Recent SEC guidance and comments from Hester Peirce suggest regulators may support tokenized equities while remaining cautious about synthetic exposure products.








