According to BlockBeats, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has issued a statement regarding the tokenization of securities, highlighting blockchain technology's role in creating new models for issuing and trading securities in tokenized form. Tokenization could potentially enhance capital formation and improve investors' ability to use their assets as collateral. This potential has attracted both emerging participants and traditional institutions to embrace on-chain products.
Despite its potential, blockchain technology does not possess the ability to alter the fundamental nature of underlying assets. Tokenized securities remain classified as securities, and market participants must carefully consider and comply with relevant federal securities laws when trading these instruments.
Issuers sometimes tokenize their own securities, which can expose investors purchasing these third-party tokens to unique risks, such as counterparty risk. Issuers of tokenized securities must also consider their disclosure obligations under federal securities laws, with guidance available from recent staff statements issued by the SEC's Division of Corporation Finance.
Market participants involved in issuing, purchasing, and trading tokenized securities should consider the characteristics of these securities and the compliance issues they raise under securities laws. While blockchain-based tokenization is an emerging technology, the act of issuing financial instruments representing securities rights is not new. The applicable legal requirements remain consistent, whether these instruments are issued on-chain or off-chain.
Therefore, market participants are encouraged to engage with the SEC and its staff when designing their tokenization product strategies. The SEC expresses willingness to collaborate with market participants to develop reasonable exemption mechanisms and advance the modernization of rules.