SEC's Tokenized Stock U-Turn: Innovation or Invitation to Chaos?
The SEC is reportedly planning an 'innovation exemption' for tokenized stock trading. Is this a boon for financial inclusion or an invitation for regulatory free-for-alls?
The SEC is reportedly planning an 'innovation exemption' for tokenized stock trading. Is this a boon for financial inclusion or an invitation for regulatory free-for-alls?
The SEC just slammed the brakes on its 'innovation exemption' for tokenized stocks. After all the hype, it seems someone remembered that regulating novel financial instruments isn't exactly simple.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is reportedly on the verge of unveiling a framework to permit the trading of tokenized stocks. This move could fundamentally alter the landscape of U.S. equity markets, but significant questions remain about investor protection and market stability.
The SEC has just done a dizzying about-face on tokenized stocks, and the market is already reacting. Suddenly, third-party platforms aren't just in a 'legal gray zone.'
Your proxy ballot just went blockchain. Broadridge, the trillion-dollar fintech beast, flipped the switch on Avalanche for Galaxy shareholders—but who's cashing in on this 'next step' for tokenized stocks?