TL;DR
Securitize listed on the New York Stock Exchange as SECZ on July 2nd, and on its first trading day deployed tokenized SECZ on Solana and Avalanche. According to CoinDesk citing RWA.xyz data, investors hold approximately $295 million in tokenized shares.

This event can easily be interpreted as 'on-chaining US stocks'. For investors, however, the key point is not the immediate emergence of 24/7 tradable on-chain stocks, but rather the appearance of a sample for on-chain public equities that is closer to a spontaneous demonstration by the issuer itself.
Securitize co-founder and CEO Carlos Domingo stated this is a strong signal validating the belief in on-chaining public equity. Some RWA observers in the X community, including @stackzz, are more cautious, still waiting to see registration of ownership, actual settlement, secondary liquidity, and whether the on-chain version can function smoothly during crowded exits.
The core issue with SECZ lies here. It is not about bringing stocks into a permissionless market, but about testing an on-chain path within the existing securities law framework that is 'issuer-initiated, same common stock, restricted access'.
The Issuer Taking Action Changes the Nature of the Sample
Putting stocks on-chain is not about deleting securities laws, but about changing the representation of share ownership to on-chain records. Traditional stocks rely on brokers, clearing, and registration systems to confirm holders, while the on-chain version aims to make transfer, reconciliation, and rights distribution more automated.
The problem with many past 'tokenized stocks' was the lack of issuer participation. What investors bought were often certificates packaged by third-party platforms, backed potentially by custodied shares or merely synthetic exposures. They could provide price exposure but struggled to prove that listed companies recognized this equity infrastructure.
The difference with SECZ is that Securitize claims the tokenized SECZ is intended to represent the same common stock traded on the NYSE, not a separate share class, nor a synthetic token or offshore wrapper. This statement should still be understood as the company's announced arrangement and does not equate to all legal details being market-validated.
A scale of $295 million is not enough to change capital markets, but it is sufficient to advance the RWA narrative from relatively closed assets like treasury funds and private credit to the more sensitive category of publicly listed company stocks.
Compliant Access is Part of the Product Design
This on-chain stock is not open to everyone. Securitize's official press release states that tokenized SECZ is for 'eligible U.S. investors' and accessible through Securitize's regulated platform. Investors need to complete platform account opening, KYC/AML, jurisdiction eligibility, and securities law requirements.
This cannot be simply understood as 'being able to freely buy and sell SECZ in a wallet from now on'. The official term is 'eligible U.S. investors,' which should not be directly equated with 'accredited investors' under U.S. securities law, nor simply explained as just asset or income thresholds.
This, instead, illustrates its true positioning: compliance is part of the product itself. Securitize-affiliated entities include an SEC-registered broker-dealer, a FINRA/SIPC member, an SEC-regulated ATS (Alternative Trading System), and an SEC-registered transfer agent.
A transfer agent can be understood as a stock registrar, responsible for recording who truly owns the shares. The on-chain version of SECZ is not about bypassing the NYSE and securities laws, but operating within the confines of regulated accounts, identity verification, investor qualification checks, and transfer restrictions.
It aims to improve settlement speed, ownership record efficiency, potential fractionalization, and cross-platform composability, not to turn US stocks into tokens freely transferable by any address.
Solana and Avalanche Assume the Role of Execution Layer
The role of Solana and Avalanche in this matter also needs to be placed in the correct context. They are not substitutes for securities law, nor the final arbiter of ownership, but rather the execution layer carrying token records and transfer rules.
In public discussions, Solana's Token-2022 is frequently mentioned. It can be understood as a token standard more suitable for compliant assets, supporting rule checks during transfers, such as allowing only verified addresses to receive assets, or pausing transfers under specific conditions.
However, whether Token-2022 is used for SECZ, and how specific functions like whitelisting, freezing, or pausing are implemented, still depends on subsequent technical disclosures from the company. For public chain investors, the value of such discussions lies in pointing out the real needs of institutional asset on-chaining, not preemptively endorsing any specific chain.
On-chaining institutional assets does not just need to be 'cheap and fast'. The chain needs to support permission management, compliant transfers, low cost, and high throughput. At least in the case of SECZ, on-chain records must still work in conjunction with traditional registration, platform accounts, and investor qualification checks. It is a hybrid system, not a pure on-chain market structure.
The RWA Trust Anchor Begins to Approach Public Stocks
Securitize is not conducting this demonstration out of thin air. Official statements show that as of June 2026, the Securitize platform manages or has tokenized assets exceeding $4 billion and has collaborated with institutions like BlackRock, Apollo, BNY Mellon, Hamilton Lane, KKR, and VanEck.
The simultaneous tokenization on SECZ's listing day is more akin to demonstrating its capability, previously used for external clients, with its own public stock. Compared to white papers, proof-of-concepts, or third-party wrappers, an issuer trialing with its own listed stock indeed lowers the psychological barrier for later adopters more effectively.
This provides a stronger trust anchor for the RWA market. If other listed companies want to evaluate on-chaining public stocks, they at least have a precedent to study. It does not mean public stocks will rapidly go on-chain on a large scale, but it advances the discussion from 'can we package price exposure' to 'can the issuer participate in the infrastructure'.
For RWA infrastructure, this is more important than the scale of a single asset. Public stocks involve trading, registration, voting, disclosure, and investor protection, leaving less room for error.
Liquidity and Rights Enforcement Determine the Sample's Value
SECZ is still a few variables away from a structural inflection point. The most direct one is secondary liquidity—whether the on-chain version has continuous trading, reasonable spreads, and reliable market-making, rather than just forming demonstrative volume on the announcement day.
If buying and selling mainly remain confined between restricted accounts, the improvement in market efficiency will be diminished. The long-term value of RWA lies in reducing friction in issuance, registration, transfer, and settlement, but the closer a security-like asset is to public market stocks, the less likely it is to be completely permissionless.
Another variable is rights enforcement. The company states the tokenized version is intended to represent the same common stock, but voting, dividends, custody, dispute resolution, and the priority between on-chain records and traditional registries need more practical cases to verify. For investors, showing a holding on-chain does not automatically resolve all legal disputes.
The most crucial replication signal is whether more non-crypto-native listed companies follow suit. Securitize itself is a tokenization platform, so putting its own stock on-chain has a natural strategic motive. If only infrastructure companies engage in self-demonstration subsequently, it may still be viewed by the market as high-spec marketing. If financial, tech, or consumer sector issuers begin adopting similar paths, SECZ will transform from a sample into early evidence of a change in market structure.





