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Using First Principles to View Security Tokenization① — Definitions, Classifications, and Value
The essence of tokenized securities is not about revolutionizing trading interfaces, but about upgrading the recording and transfer of financial rights into a verifiable, programmable shared state. This article analyzes four models of securities tokenization, a three-layer analytical framework, and how to improve settlement efficiency and collateral management. The source of this article is Foresight News, compiled, edited, and written by Dynamic Zone Trends.
(Background: RWA Thousand-Word Research Report: The First Wave of Tokenization Has Arrived)
(Additional context: Why is ERC-3643 the most suitable token standard for RWA?)
Table of Contents
Tags: securities tokenization, RWA, tokenized securities, BlackRock, BUIDL, settlement efficiency, compliance
1. What exactly is securities tokenization?
Analyzing from first principles, the essence of securities is not just a piece of code or a number in an account, but a set of rights enforceable by courts and regulators:
Ownership, income rights, voting rights, redemption rights, protection of client assets under bankruptcy isolation, procedures for dealing with counterparty default, and asset segregation and transferability under investor protection frameworks.
Therefore, on-chain securities are not simply replacing the trading UI with wallets or exchanges, but engineering the following four aspects with blockchain technology to enhance transaction flow and clearing/settlement efficiency:
Before formally analyzing tokenized securities, we need to classify and define this broad concept carefully and rigorously. Without a unified definition and classification, there is no common discussion framework. Combining the latest market practices, tokenized securities roughly fall into four categories, with compliance levels from low to high:
1. Regulated fund shares and cash asset tokenization
This path was scaled first and has the highest compliance level. Typical examples include various on-chain tokenized money market funds and Treasury funds. Their advantages are simple rights structures, transparent valuation, few corporate actions, and controllable regulation.
Notable cases include:
BlackRock’s BUIDL product released via Securitize on March 20, 2024
J.P. Morgan Asset Management’s Ethereum-based tokenized money market fund MONY released on December 15, 2025
2. Native issued securities tokens
Tokens issued, registered, and transferred entirely on-chain.
Theoretically the purest, but due to strict regulatory, transfer agent rules, and secondary market structure requirements, progress is slow, and mature products and practices are still lacking.
3. Wrapped, custodial tokenized stocks
Third-party platforms collaborating with traditional US stock brokers, using physical stock holdings as underlying, then issuing tokens based on this, similar to ADR logic but with a more complex overall structure.
Typical examples include DeFi projects like Satblestock, which obtain US stock exposure through cooperation with traditional brokers, then anchor on-chain via synchronized minting and burning, and provide trading venues.
4. Synthetic, derivative on-chain US stock exposure
A key point for these on-chain US stock investment tools is that on-chain exposure does not equal the underlying security. This leads to higher counterparty risk for investors, and the regulatory boundaries and definitions are most sensitive, such as various US stock perpetual contracts developed under Hyperliquid’s HIP-3 protocol.
By analyzing these four different models and underlying architectures of US stock tokenization, we can abstract a three-layer framework for analyzing tokenized securities products:
A. Legal layer
Does the token represent a security interest under securities law?
Can investor rights be enforced in courts and regulatory frameworks?
Does it fall under existing rules for brokers, trading venues, clearing, transfer agents?
A key regulatory perspective here is: tokenized securities are still securities; technology does not change the nature of the underlying assets. SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce emphasized in 2025 that blockchain does not alter the properties of the underlying assets; tokens sponsored or issued by third parties may only provide synthetic exposure without shareholder rights. Further regulatory details will be elaborated later.
B. Capital layer
Who maintains the public ledger or an acknowledged equivalent ledger?
Is the token equivalent and interchangeable with traditional securities?
Industry organization (SIFMA) in late 2025 clearly stated: Tokenized and non-tokenized versions of the same share class should be legally and economically interchangeable; otherwise, issues like market fragmentation, price divergence, and weakened investor protection may arise.
C. Economic layer
Does the token represent: equity ownership, benefit rights, or just price exposure?
Are there redemption or conversion mechanisms? Who is the redemption object, and under what conditions?
As previously mentioned, investment exposure ≠ the security itself; being able to buy at a price does not equate to ownership rights. The economic nature of rights determines regulatory risk, counterparty risk, and whether it can enter mainstream capital pools.
After clarifying the main product logic and analysis framework, this article and subsequent series mainly discuss high-compliance tokenized securities products based on traditional financial frameworks and their issuance paths, rather than non-compliant DeFi products or platforms built on on-chain ecosystems.
2. What problems does it solve, and what value does it create?
To summarize in one sentence—
The core value of securities tokenization is to upgrade the recording and transfer of financial rights into a verifiable, programmable, and composable shared state via blockchain technology, thereby significantly improving settlement and collateral efficiency, reducing reconciliation and compliance friction, and enabling traditional assets to have native on-chain composability and automation capabilities.
Value 1: Turning multi-ledger reconciliation into a single ledger execution
Core summary:
Tokenization transforms many complex, costly backend operations into transparent, consistent frontend rules.
Traditional problem:
In traditional markets, a single security transaction leaves records across multiple systems: exchange ATS, broker ledgers, custodial clearing systems, transfer agents, regulatory reporting systems…
Its operation relies on a finely tuned integration system: message passing + reconciliation + error handling + legal accountability.
This incurs two costs:
Operational costs: reconciliation, correction, failed settlements, corporate actions heavily rely on manual and batch processes.
Time costs: settlement is not just a single step but confirmed after a process cycle, thus not immediately final.
Tokenization solution:
Create a shared ledger state that multiple parties can read and verify, representing asset status (who holds, frozen, collateralized, post-corporate actions balances), and encode transfer rules as auditable executable logic.
Direct benefits:
Reduce reconciliation and error costs: no longer a reconciliation-driven trusted system, but a shared state-driven trusted system on-chain.
Lower failed settlement and dispute resolution costs: post-trade processing shifts from post-facto correction to real-time constraints.
Value 2: Changing settlement modes to improve collateral efficiency
Core summary:
The core of tokenization is not just faster trading, but faster, more granular scheduling of money and collateral.
Traditional problem:
A common misconception is that T+1/T+2 simply results from slow technology implementation. In fact, it’s a compromise due to current traditional financial structures: netting reduces liquidity needs but introduces settlement cycles, counterparty risk, and complex margin systems.
Thus, the main pain points are not speed but:
Tokenization solution:
Place securities and on-chain cash or settlement assets on a programmable track, enabling near real-time settlement and collateral management.
Direct benefits:
Value 3: Transforming compliance from post-checks to pre-constraints
Core summary:
Tokenization can turn compliance from a post-hoc regulatory investigation into automatic pre-execution rules.
What are traditional problems:
In traditional markets, compliance often involves processes + records + spot checks + accountability: KYC, investor suitability, transfer restrictions, position limits, sanctions lists, freezing, judicial cooperation… Many compliance requirements are traceable after the fact but may not prevent violations proactively.
Tokenization solution:
Embed some compliance rules as hard constraints in asset and transfer layers:
Direct benefits:
Value 4: Making securities into composable financial parts
This is the most valued feature in the crypto world, and may gradually be adopted by traditional finance: composability.
Traditional problem:
Poor composability of traditional assets is not due to lack of standardization but because of inconsistent interfaces, permissions, and settlement processes. To combine stocks + margins + loans + options into automated strategies often requires cross-institutional, cross-system, cross-time window coordination.
Tokenization solution:
Direct benefits:
Enhance composability to accelerate financial innovation.
Easier distribution of long-tail assets: standardized interfaces reduce issuance and channel onboarding costs.
Finally, after understanding the potential value and problems addressed by securities tokenization, it’s also important to clarify what tokenization does not solve and its boundaries.
First, tokenization does not automatically grant regulatory exemptions; securities remain securities, and responsible parties must exist.
Second, tokenization does not inherently increase liquidity; atomic settlement may reduce counterparty risk but could sacrifice the liquidity benefits of netting.
Finally, tokenization does not eliminate intermediaries overnight: intermediaries will shift from simple record-keeping and reconciliation to compliance responsibilities, key management, risk control, and client protection.