SEC Staff Statement on Tokenized Securities – Innovation as a Regulated Evolution
SEC Staff Statement on Tokenized Securities – Innovation as a Regulated Evolution
On January 28, 2026, the SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance, Division of Investment Management, and Division of Trading and Markets (collectively, the “Division Staff”) issued a joint statement outlining their views on the taxonomies associated with tokenized securities, i.e., traditional securities formatted as or represented by a crypto asset with ownership records maintained in whole or in part on a crypto network. The statement does not provide relief or establish a new regulatory framework; rather, it reflects the Division Staff’s view that existing U.S. federal securities laws apply to tokenized securities and that market participants must carefully assess how tokenized offerings are structured and characterized.
Where tokenization is undertaken by or on behalf of the issuer, the Division Staff describes two architectures:
In both cases, the Division Staff treats DLT as an alternative recordkeeping mechanism rather than a novel asset class. Issuers may also support multiple formats of the same class of securities (e.g., tokenized and traditional) or issue different classes in different formats, though the Division Staff cautions that instruments with substantially similar rights may be treated as the same class for certain purposes under the federal securities laws.
Where a third party tokenizes securities issued by another person, the Division Staff draws a distinction:
The statement reflects the Division Staff’s view that tokenized securities are regulated securities under the federal securities laws and that securities laws apply regardless of format. The statement also recognizes that there are various tokenization models that raise specific legal and regulatory implications, including issuer direct, third-party tokenization, and tokens that function as “receipts for securities” or, in some structures, resemble security-based swaps. The statement also complements the Division of Trading and Markets’ December 2025 guidance[1] on broker-dealer custody of crypto asset securities, reinforcing a move away from treating tokenized securities as a special or exceptional category. Finally, the statement dovetails with and elaborates on Commissioner Peirce’s “Enchanting, but Not Magical” July 2025 statement,[2] reflecting that this type of innovation should be treated as a “regulated evolution” approach. It is expected that, in the near future, the SEC will release a sandbox framework to ease compliance burdens on new entrants.
If you have any questions regarding this alert, please contact the authors.
[1] “Statement on the Custody of Crypto Asset Securities by Broker-Dealers” (Dec. 17, 2025).
[2] “Enchanting, but Not Magical: A Statement on the Tokenization of Securities” (July 9, 2025).






