Galaxy Digital has asked the US Securities and Exchange Commission to let tokenized securities trade on automated market makers. The firm said qualifying AMMs should not be treated as exchanges under current law. It also said liquidity providers on those platforms should not be treated as dealers.
Galaxy Digital sent its letter to the SEC’s Crypto Task Force this week. The filing focused on tokenized securities and AMM-based trading. The firm asked for a clear rule path.

Galaxy said some AMMs work without discretionary control. It also pointed to transparent pricing and deterministic settlement. In its view, those features place such systems outside exchange rules.
The firm said access on these AMMs is non-discriminatory. It also said the rules should stay technology neutral. That point directly challenges arguments from traditional market groups.
Galaxy framed the issue as a choice about market structure. It said tokenized stocks could move through decentralized protocols. Or they could stay inside traditional systems.
Galaxy argued that qualifying AMMs do not match the Exchange Act definition of an exchange. The filing said the systems do not exercise judgment over orders. It said the code runs the process in a fixed way.
The firm also addressed liquidity providers. It said they trade for their own accounts and not for customers. It added that they do not solicit orders.
Galaxy said those users do not provide two-sided quotes in the traditional sense. Because of that, it said dealer registration should not apply. The letter tied that point to the dealer-trader distinction.
The filing said these features do not weaken core market protections. Instead, Galaxy said transparency and fixed execution can support fair trading. It asked the SEC to recognize those differences.
Galaxy did not ask for open-ended relief. It proposed a conditional innovation exemption for tokenized securities trading on AMMs. The plan includes clear safeguards.
The suggested framework includes whitelisting, volume caps, and required disclosures. Galaxy said those tools could help preserve market integrity. At the same time, they could allow compliant tokenization models.
The company’s filing used direct language against resistance from legacy finance groups. Alex Thorn wrote on X that “banks and brokerages are playing a cynical game.” He added that “tokenized stocks are the next front.”
Even so, the formal filing kept its focus on rule design. It asked the SEC to support systems that meet specific standards. It also urged the agency to avoid rules tied to old infrastructure.
The filing comes during a broader policy shift in Washington. The SEC has taken steps that appear more open to crypto market structure. That background gives the letter added weight.
The agency launched Project Crypto earlier in 2026. The stated aim is to bring parts of capital markets onto blockchain rails. In March, the SEC and CFTC also issued a joint digital asset taxonomy.
Galaxy has also moved on tokenization itself. The company said it became the first Nasdaq-listed firm to tokenize its equity on a public blockchain. A shareholder vote is planned for May 2026 through Broadridge’s platform on Avalanche.
SIFMA has argued that tokenized securities should remain inside legacy systems. Galaxy rejected that approach in its filing. The SEC’s response may now shape the next phase of tokenized stock trading.
The post Galaxy Presses SEC To Permit Tokenized Stock Trading Through AMMs appeared first on CoinCentral.


