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On January 28, 2026, the SEC’s Divisions of Corporation Finance, Investment Management, and Trading and Markets issued a joint statement addressing “tokenized securities.” The staff defines a tokenized security as a financial instrument that already fits within the statutory definition of a “security,” but is “formatted as or represented by a crypto asset,” with ownership recorded in whole or in part on a crypto network. In other words, putting a security “onchain” does not in and of itself change the security into something else.
Introduction
On January 28, 2026, the SEC’s Divisions of Corporation Finance, Investment Management, and Trading and Markets issued a joint statement addressing “tokenized securities.” The staff defines a tokenized security as a financial instrument that already fits within the statutory definition of a “security,”[1] but is “formatted as or represented by a crypto asset,” with ownership recorded in whole or in part on a crypto network. In other words, putting a security “onchain” does not in and of itself change the security into something else.[2]
Tokenized securities generally fall into two categories:
The statement divides tokenized securities into two broad categories: (1) issuer-sponsored, and (2) securities tokenized by unaffiliated third parties.
The staff also notes that issuers can have multiple formats of the same class of securities, or even create a separate class in tokenized form. But if the tokenized instrument is of “substantially similar character” and carries “substantially similar rights and privileges,” it may be treated as the same class for certain securities law purposes.
The statement also addresses structures where the blockchain does not itself constitute the official master securityholder file. In those models, the issuer maintains the authoritative ownership record offchain, and the token functions as a mechanism to facilitate transfers that are then reflected in the issuer’s books. Even in that case, the tokenized instrument involves a securities transaction and must comply with the federal securities laws.
The statement describes two primary third-party models.
The staff underscores that whether an instrument is a security-based swap or a linked security can depend on exclusions from the definition of “swap,” and that “the economic reality of the instrument rather than the name given to the instrument” determines its treatment.
[1] The Guidance explicitly noted that “security” is defined in Section 2(a)(1) of the Securities Act of 1933, Section 3(a)(10) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and Section 2(a)(36) of the Investment Company Act of 1940.
[2] We note that due to changes regarding securities in the 2022 Amendments of the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), the management of an onchain security for UCC purposes may vary from the way an offchain security would be handled.
[3] See Commodities Exchange Act Section 1a(47). The Guidance noted that the definition consists of six prongs and specified exclusions. If a crypto asset satisfies one or more of the prongs of the definition of “swap” and does not fall within one of the statutorily specified exclusions, the crypto asset is a swap.
[4] See Securities Exchange Act Section 3(a)(68).
[5] The statement reinforces the jurisdictional boundary with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, as instruments that qualify as “swaps” but not “security-based swaps” may fall under the Commodity Exchange Act. On December 8, 2025, the CFTC’s Market Participants Division, Division of Market Oversight, and Division of Clearing and Risk issued guidance on tokenized collateral in Staff Letter 25-39; and the CFTC’s Market Participants Division issued guidance in Staff Letter 25-40 regarding digital assets accepted as margin collateral. The CFTC’s December 2025 guidance on tokenization takes a notably practical, market-operations approach, in contrast to the SEC’s taxonomy-heavy analysis. Rather than focusing on how to categorize tokenized instruments, the CFTC addressed how tokenized assets can function within the existing derivatives regulatory framework—particularly as margin collateral. See also Cadwalader Resources: Client and Friends, CFTC Opens the Door to Digital Asset Collateral: Regulatory Guidance, No-Action Relief, and Practical Implications (Dec. 23, 2025); available at: https://www.cadwalader.com/resources/clients-friends-memos/cftc-opens-the-door-to-digital-asset-collateral--regulatory-guidance-no-action-relief-and-practical-implications.