This move not only attempts to eliminate the "IPO time gap" between Wall Street and the crypto world but also, with its over $2.5 billion in assets under management and $9 billion in cumulative trading volume, demonstrates an ambition to transform from an "intermediary" to a "digital underwriter."
However, no matter how high-profile or transformative Ondo is, it is merely a form of "downstream breakthrough" initiated by a crypto-native protocol. What truly determines the upper limit of the U.S. stock tokenization wave are the traditional infrastructure giants. On January 19, 2026, the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) officially announced that it is developing a platform for trading tokenized securities and on-chain settlement and will apply for the necessary approvals from regulatory authorities for this platform.
This news sparked considerable discussion in both traditional finance circles and the crypto industry, but most people simplified it to one sentence—"The NYSE is going to tokenize U.S. stocks." This statement is certainly correct but far from sufficient. If this is simply understood as "putting stocks on-chain" or "traditional finance moving closer to Web3," the essence is missed. The NYSE's move is actually a well-considered institutional revolution.
Crypto Salad hopes to start from this news itself and comprehensively and systematically梳理 the current development process of U.S. stock tokenization. As the first article in a series, we will specifically discuss what this重磅 news itself says and what impact it will have on the entire traditional U.S. stock industry.
I. What Exactly Did the NYSE News Say?
Judging from the information announced by the NYSE, the exchange is not merely slapping a "token" label on stocks. Its core is not a specific product but rather a re-deconstruction and重构 of the entire chain in the securities trading system. We have noted four core changes,梳理ed as follows:
(1) 7×24 Hour Trading
7×24 hour trading is a core, often-discussed difference between crypto financial markets and traditional financial markets. But the 7×24 hour trading mentioned by the NYSE this time is not simply延长 trading hours; it explicitly focuses on "post-trade infrastructure." It aims to create a new digital platform that combines the existing matching engine (Pillar) with a blockchain-based post-trade system, thereby enabling the "trading, settlement, custody" chain to operate continuously. Simply put, the NYSE wants to create new technological and institutional arrangements to allow the settlement system itself to adapt to continuous operation.
The core reason traditional securities markets have long adhered to fixed trading hours is that various processes in the workflow, such as settlement and fund transfers, highly depend on bank operating hours and清算 windows. The NYSE proposes using on-chain or tokenized funding instruments to cover the "funding gaps during non-operating hours," thereby activating the "night/weekend" market closure periods.
Whether round-the-clock trading is ultimately good or bad for financial markets and retail investors, Crypto Salad believes should be considered cautiously. But for U.S. stocks themselves, the benefits certainly outweigh the drawbacks. After all, as the world's core asset pool, if U.S. stocks' trading hours remain fixed to their home territory, they cannot advance further to become a more globalized base for asset liquidity.
(2) Instant Settlement with Stablecoins
As just mentioned, the NYSE hopes to extend trading hours using new "on-chain or tokenized funding instruments." Among them, one of the core tools is the settlement tool.
The wording in the NYSE's official announcement is "instant settlement" and "stablecoin-based funding," and it explicitly states that the platform will use a "blockchain post-trade system" to achieve on-chain settlement. Here we must grasp two key points:
- First, the NYSE is not proposing a basic vision like "buying stocks with stablecoins" but hopes that stablecoins can become tools for settlement and margin management.
- Second, the meaning of "instant settlement" is to evolve delivery from the traditional T+1 to near real-time.
The most直观 effect this brings is avoiding various risks formed by the time gap between trading and settlement. The NYSE specifically mentioned working with BNY and Citi to promote "tokenized deposits," aiming to allow清算 members to transfer and manage funds, meet margin requirements, and cover cross-time zone and cross-jurisdictional funding needs during banks' non-operating hours.
(3) Fractional Share Trading
Having discussed the innovation in trading infrastructure, let's talk about the biggest benefit this innovation brings (for non-U.S. investors).
The narrative of U.S. stock tokenization has developed to this point, and the benefits and risks of fractional shares have,印象中, been analyzed many times. But this NYSE news should be considered the first official mention of the concept of "fractional share trading." The news mentioned that the platform hopes to change the trading unit from the traditional 1 "share" to a unit closer to "asset allocation by amount." One share of Tesla is now worth $400; small retail investors can't afford to buy it and can't afford its drops. But if in the future, one could spend $10 on the new platform to buy 0.025 shares of Tesla, wouldn't that be tempting?
Of course, making retail investors with modest investment power happy is certainly not the NYSE's biggest goal. The NYSE intends to redefine the minimum tradable unit of securities, making it adaptable to the granularity of tokenization and on-chain settlement.
The impact of this move is considerable. First, the way market making and liquidity are supplied will change dramatically, as liquidity will no longer solely revolve around the depth of whole shares but will be rebuilt around other standards (such as amount). Second, when the platform allows "tokenized stocks and traditionally issued securities to be fungible," fractional shares make it easier for different forms of the same asset to be清算ed, exchanged, and connected across different systems. This sounds a bit abstract, but it can be simply analogized to breaking large bills into small change and unifying the currency, allowing it to be spent and exchanged in different stores.
In this structural adjustment, the significance of fractional share trading is also redefined. For a long time, fractional shares have often been seen as a "convenience feature" for retail investors. But in this context, it更像 is a precondition at the financial engineering level. Only when assets can be standardized and split can they possess further composability, routability, and programmability, and thus be incorporated into automated清算 and on-chain settlement systems. In other words, fractional shares are not meant to "make it affordable for more people" but to give the assets themselves the technical foundation for digital circulation.
(4) Native Digital Securities (Native Issuance)
Regarding the concept of "Native Digital Securities," the NYSE has also provided very clear boundaries. Its goal is not, like Nasdaq, to simply map existing stocks onto on-chain certificates, but to explore securities forms that run natively on-chain from the point of rights confirmation.
This means that dividends, voting rights, and corporate governance mechanisms are not patched in through off-chain rules but are directly embedded into the lifecycle of the digital security. This is not a packaging upgrade at the technical level but a redefinition of the way securities exist.
Once native issuance is allowed, it意味着 that the logic of securities rights confirmation, holder registries, corporate dividends, voting, governance, as well as custody and transfer restrictions must be redesigned. At the same time, a more attractive point is that the NYSE limits the distribution channels to qualified broker-dealers, also preemptively answering the core question regulators will ask: this is not a "wild token market" for retail investors to freely mint and circulate, but one that retains order, thresholds, and management.
II. Why Now?
Why now? Why would the NYSE propose such a "radical" reform at this moment?
Any innovative form of financial product that truly goes mainstream ultimately tests not whether the narrative is appealing, but whether the underlying system is robust enough to withstand the entry of large-scale, low-error-tolerance funds.
Over the past few years, the market has not lacked discussions about "on-chain," "decentralization," and "efficiency revolution." But the reason these discussions have not been applied in reality is that they are often built on尚未成熟的 funding,清算, and risk control foundations.
And the NYSE is also very smart; it did not attempt to run a blockchain system centered on itself but embedded tokenization into the existing market infrastructure.
Its parent company, ICE, is cooperating with traditional core banks like BNY Mellon and Citibank to support tokenized deposits and related funding instruments within its清算所 system. This arrangement will allow清算 members to transfer funds, fulfill margin obligations, and manage risk exposures during banks' non-operating hours, thus providing a practical and feasible funding and liquidity support for 7×24 hour trading.
Here, Crypto Salad would like to emphasize that when the funds themselves begin to be tokenized, what we are talking about is no longer "conceptual assets" but "money" itself. Then regulation, risk control, and access standards must be raised to an extremely high level; otherwise, the system simply cannot bear the trust of mainstream society.
Precisely because of this, the NYSE did not attempt to "start a new炉灶" in its market structure design. The platform emphasizes "non-discriminatory access" within the compliance framework, but this non-discrimination always has boundaries—it is only open to qualified broker-dealers. All trading behavior is still embedded within the existing market structure and regulatory logic, not游离 outside the regulatory system. Therefore, those who can secure their position in the future are not new "counterparties" but the layer of infrastructure that can承载 user understanding, asset allocation, and trading entry on top of the compliant trading system.
Under the裹挟 of the major trend, seizing生态 position and occupying the on-chain liquidity entrance has become a necessary battle for various platform players like Ondo, Kraken, and MSX. This race is not only participated in by crypto-native giants like Ondo; platforms like MSX, which深耕 the vertical track of U.S. stock tokenization, are also building their defensive moats by高频筛选 and listing new derivative products. For these中小 players with faster response times and more precise切入点, as long as they can站稳脚跟 in this wave, the future imagination space is huge.
At the same time, tokenization does not change the legal attributes of securities; tokenized shareholders still fully enjoy the dividend rights and governance rights corresponding to traditional securities under the law. This point was considered crucial in the meeting discussion: when a product attempts to enter the mainstream capital market, whether the rights are clear and the rights confirmation is solid is far more important than the technical path itself.
From a more macro perspective, what the NYSE is trying to solve is not only the transaction efficiency problem but also the long-standing problem of liquidity fragmentation困扰 traditional markets. By combining "high-trust institutional arrangements" with "more efficient technical means," it hopes to bring those trading demands that originally flowed to dark pools, over-the-counter structures, or non-regulated platforms back into a transparent, auditable, and accountable system. A consensus that emerged repeatedly in the meeting was: the innovation that can穿越周期 is often not the most radical batch, but those forms that can withstand the most stringent检验 at the compliance and infrastructure level. Once such a structure is verified as feasible, the entry of traditional funds is not a阻力 but反而 becomes an accelerator.
From a legal perspective, the deeper significance of this process is not limited to technological upgrade but is closer to a阶段性演化 in the way capital is formed. Through on-chain清算 and custody, traditional financial institutions can, without overthrowing the existing securities law and regulatory framework, make asset allocation more global and time-continuous. This is not "the old system being replaced by new technology," but new technology being incorporated into the core, most rigorous operating logic of the old system—and this,恰恰, is the prerequisite for mainstream finance to truly begin accepting a new form.
Special Statement: This article is an original work by the Crypto Salad team and represents only the personal views of the author of this article. It does not constitute legal advice or legal opinion on specific matters.








