- The Guidance
- Posts
- Why Congress ❤️ tokenisation
Why Congress ❤️ tokenisation
GM, Joanna here.
BlackRock CEO Larry Fink, investment banking giants, and now Congress are waking up to the potential $16 trillion tokenisation industry.
The digital assets subcommittee in the House of Representatives will convene on Wednesday to discuss the potential of so-called “real-world asset” tokenisation.
I’ve been talking to Wall Street and its tech providers for a decade, and I’ve never been convinced they’ve found applications for blockchain that work at scale outside their walled gardens.
I must admit, though, that there’s a lot of tokenisation momentum lately in influential quarters.
Just this past week, for example:
The US’s clearing house — the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation — along with two EU counterparts, published a blueprint for tokenisation standards. My story here.
Derivatives trade body the International Swaps and Derivatives Association published guidance on the legal treatment of tokenised collateral. Tokenisation could unlock $19 trillion in dormant collateral, as Inbar Preiss and I wrote.
Securities and Exchange Commissioner Hester Peirce responded to a UK tokenisation proposal, outlining her idea of a cross-border sandbox.
Now, why is Congress getting involved?
Tokenisation involves instruments that are already securities or commodities, so one might assume we could sidestep the “are they securities or aren’t they” debate that dogs cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum.
A memo released ahead of the hearing suggests there are areas of legal uncertainty, however.
The hearing could result in the SEC and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission jointly considering whether new rules are necessary to facilitate tokenisation.
Some industry insiders, though, say no new rules are needed.
Prometheum co-CEO Aaron Kaplan ruffled feathers when he told Congress last year that the US securities laws were adequate to govern crypto assets.
Kaplan’s is the first company to obtain a special SEC licence that allows it to custody crypto, and it recently soft-launched custody services for Ether with unnamed clients.
“I don’t think anything’s missing in the law,” Kaplan told me ahead of the hearing.
“What’s missing is the market infrastructure that is licensed under securities laws and allows for the public trading, clearing, settlement, and custody of digital assets,” he said.
“That’s why Prometheum was created.”
Securitize has also registered for certain licences with the SEC to replicate securities market structure for tokenised assets.
I chronicled that process here.
It paid off — Securitize is now the transfer agent for BlackRock’s $456.3 million tokenised securities fund BUIDL.
Securitize’s founder and CEO Carlos Domingo, incidentally, is one of the witnesses scheduled for Wednesday’s hearing, along with the DTCC’s Nadine Chakar and outspoken crypto sceptic Professor Hilary Allen.
So it should be a good debate.
Want to debate tokenisation with me? Reach out to [email protected].
Story of the Week
OKX has withdrew its application for a Securities and Futures Commission licence, and ceased trading services. Callan Quinn writes that seven companies in total have withdrawn such applications — signalling progress in authorities’ efforts to clean up Hong Kong’s freewheeling crypto scene.
Post of the Week
Former FTX exec Ryan Salame reacted to news that Donald Trump was found guilty on 34 felony counts related to hush money he paid a porn star. Here, Salame is presumably referring also to himself — he was sentenced to 7.5 years in prison.
“I am devastated and shocked that, despite the court’s clear directive for his admission to a hospital, the authorities have not allowed him to leave the very prison causing his illness,” Yuki Gambaryan said. Yuki is the wife of Binance exec Tigran Gambaryan (right), who is being held in a Nigerian prison and apparently being denied treatment for malaria and infection. |
DL News is an independent news organisation that provides original, in-depth reporting on the largely misunderstood world of cryptocurrency and decentralised finance. From original stories to investigations, our journalism is accurate, honest and responsible.
Forwarded by a friend? subscribe here.
Comment of the Week