The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has articulated a firm stance on the necessity for federal oversight of tokenized assets, emphasizing the importance of regulatory clarity and investor protection within the rapidly evolving digital securities landscape. This position was especially demonstrated through the issuance of a no-action letter to the Depository Trust Company (DTC) on December 11, 2025, granting a three-year relief period for its tokenization initiative under DTCC Tokenization Services. The program facilitates the tokenization of entitlements to eligible securities held by DTC investors, utilizing pre-approved blockchains and registered wallets to provide advantages such as jurisdictional mobility, decentralization for direct investor access, and programmable features through smart contracts. Importantly, the ability to de-tokenize allows investors to revert their digital assets back to conventional book-entry securities, while administrative control over minting and burning tokens remains centralized within DTC, including mechanisms to address errors or malfeasance. This no-action relief specifically confirms that these activities do not violate federal securities laws, signaling regulatory acceptance within defined parameters.
The SEC’s relief confines compliance requirements to clearing agency regulations, technological infrastructure, risk management, governance, and operations, with the explicit exclusion of tokenized securities from DTC’s risk management metrics, collateral, and settlement value assessments. The program mandates ongoing sanctions screening of registered wallets based on Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) protocols and preserves participant responsibilities to fulfill anti-money laundering (AML) and know-your-customer (KYC) obligations. Quarterly reports focusing on participation metrics, asset volumes, system performance, and governance are also requisites during the relief period, which terminates three years after the Preliminary Base Version launch or if significant program modifications occur. Notably, the program maintains DTC’s role as a central securities depository and securities intermediary, preserving the traditional Article 8 security entitlement structure while enabling enhanced transparency and transferability (DTC’s role preserved). Despite these provisions, recent regulatory ambiguity continues to challenge full innovation adoption in the sector.
This framework restricts tokenized assets to highly liquid securities, including Russell 1000 Index stocks, U.S. Treasuries, and major ETFs like the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100, with stringent criteria governing securities, participants, blockchains, and tokenization protocols. The program maintains separation between tokenization platforms and DTC’s core clearance and settlement systems, allowing only opting investors to transfer tokenized securities through registered wallets, assuming compliance with issuer restrictions and Uniform Commercial Code provisions. By categorizing tokenized securities as federally regulated financial instruments, either issuer-tokenized or third-party models—custodial or synthetic—the SEC delineates legal boundaries which underpin the custody and representation of traditional securities in digital form. These developments align with a broader regulatory evolution as the SEC refines enforcement priorities, collaborates with other agencies, and anticipates continued guidance and rulemaking to guarantee the integrity of digital securities markets.








