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SEC Readies Innovation Exemption for Tokenized Stock Trading

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is nearing a regulatory shift that could finally greenlight tokenized stock trading domestically. SEC Chair Paul Atkins is reportedly crafting an innovation exemption, allowing firms like Coinbase to offer blockchain-based equities while bypassing the most rigid, traditional disclosure requirements for early testing phases.

SEC Readies Innovation Exemption for Tokenized Stock Trading

The proposed framework aims to bridge the gap between legacy market rules and modern digital assets, enabling 24-hour trading cycles with near-instant settlement. Under this potential mandate, tokenized shares would retain core investor rights, including voting privileges and dividend distributions, mirroring the economic utility of traditional equities. This move follows a period of agency caution, where prior concerns regarding custody and investor protection had stalled momentum.

Simultaneously, the SEC is reconsidering the architecture of U.S. markets by proposing the repeal of Rules 611 and 610(e) of Regulation NMS. These two-decade-old provisions, which govern order execution and price priority, have faced criticism from Atkins for fostering complexity rather than competition. While the repeal is a separate administrative action, it signals a broader agency appetite to modernize infrastructure to accommodate decentralized financial products.

Market demand for such assets has exploded, with CoinGecko reporting that the number of tokenized stocks surged from 14 to 478 between early 2024 and mid-2026—a growth rate exceeding 3,300%. Major institutions are already positioning themselves for this shift, as Citigroup explores tokenized stakes in companies like OpenAI, and the New York Stock Exchange builds out 24-hour trading infrastructure. Should the SEC finalize the innovation exemption, these projects could transition from international pilots to core components of the U.S. financial landscape.

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