The SEC approved Nasdaq’s proposed rule change on March 18, 2026, clearing the way for securities listed on the exchange to trade in tokenized form under the existing market structure.
SEC Greenlights Nasdaq Tokenized Securities Under SR-NASDAQ-2025-072
The approval, filed as Release No. 34-105047, caps a process that began with Nasdaq’s original filing on September 8, 2025. The SEC found the proposal consistent with the Exchange Act after reviewing an amended notice submitted in January 2026.
Under the approved framework, tokenized shares must be fully fungible with the traditional security. They carry the same CUSIP identifier and provide the same material rights and privileges as their non-tokenized counterparts.
Critically, tokenized securities will trade on the same order book as traditional shares. A preference to clear and settle in tokenized form does not change execution priority, meaning orders are matched identically regardless of settlement type.
Approval Validates Tokenization Inside Traditional Market Rails
The significance of the ruling lies in what it preserves, not just what it enables. Nasdaq’s matching logic stays untouched, and the entire model operates within the Exchange Act framework rather than creating a separate crypto-native market structure.
Nasdaq President Tal Cohen previously described the initiative as a step toward “an always-on financial ecosystem,” while Kraken’s Arjun Sethi framed it as a way to “expand access to public markets.” Both statements came during the broader market volatility that has defined Q1 2026.
Industry reaction has been constructive but measured. The order validates tokenized equities inside established infrastructure, a point that carries weight as crypto and traditional finance continue to intersect. But there is a wide gap between regulatory approval and live, mass-market adoption.
What the Approval Does Not Cover
Post-trade clearing and settlement under the approved model depend entirely on DTC (Depository Trust Company) processes. Nasdaq’s core matching engine is not being modified, and the tokenized settlement layer sits downstream of trade execution.
Crypto media framings that suggest tokenized Nasdaq stocks are now available for broad retail 24/7 trading are not supported by the SEC order alone. The approval is a rule change, not a product launch, and rollout timelines will depend on DTC readiness, pilot constraints, and issuer adoption.
The original weekly recap headline also referenced a second item beginning with “Senators reach deal wi…” This claim was truncated at the source and could not be verified against any accessible congressional or Senate documentation. Readers tracking legislative developments alongside recent market swings should wait for a complete, sourced report on that item.
For now, the confirmed regulatory milestone is narrow but real: Nasdaq has SEC clearance to let listed securities trade in tokenized form, within the guardrails of existing market infrastructure. Implementation timelines and the scope of issuer participation remain the next variables to watch.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.