SEC disclosure obligations and a proposed innovation exemption shape tokenized securities issuance and trading, as SIFMA, exchanges and DTCC outline guardrails.SEC disclosure obligations and a proposed innovation exemption shape tokenized securities issuance and trading, as SIFMA, exchanges and DTCC outline guardrails.

Tokenized Securities face SEC tests as safe harbor eyed

2026/03/13 10:31
3 min read
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What to Know:

  • Tokenized securities must comply with SEC regulations regardless of token format.
  • Innovation exemptions enable limited, sandboxed testing without sweeping regulatory changes.

As reported by Bloomberg, an SEC commissioner has urged simpler disclosure rules and an “innovation exemption” so tokenized securities can be tested without undermining investor protections. The message is that tokenization changes market plumbing, not legal status, so federal disclosure obligations still apply.

A review of prior safe-harbor thinking shows how such an experiment might be scoped. According to DLA Piper, the 2020 Rule 195 concept contemplated time-limited relief, mandatory project-level disclosures, and milestones for functional or decentralization maturity.

Why it matters now: disclosure continuity with guarded experimentation

For issuers and intermediaries, continuity of disclosure is the anchor while experimentation remains guarded and reversible. The policy balance is to measure efficiency gains without diluting antifraud and market-integrity protections.

According to SIFMA, any exemption should initially restrict participation to qualified investors, cap transaction volumes and participants, and include hard sunsets to prevent a permanent parallel market. The letter emphasizes investor protection and market integrity.

According to the World Federation of Exchanges, broad exemptive relief for tokenized equities could erode market integrity if firms bypass established oversight frameworks used by major exchanges. Members warned that treating tokenized assets differently could undermine trust.

According to DTCC, a December 2025 No-Action Letter enabled tokenization of DTC-custodied assets within pre-approved infrastructure, showing a compliant path today. This illustrates that experimentation can run inside current rules. “The digital versions must carry the same rights, legal obligations, and protections as their traditional equivalents,” said Frank La Salla, CEO.

Policy signaling also stresses legal continuity over novelty. “Tokenized securities are still securities under U.S. law,” said hester peirce, Commissioner, in a July 2025 statement.

Defining tokenized securities, innovation exemption, and SEC disclosure rules

Tokenized securities are traditional securities recorded and transferred on distributed ledgers, with the same economic and legal rights as their off-chain versions. In practice, the ledger is the record-keeping mechanism, not a new asset class.

An innovation exemption is a time-bound, limited-scope regulatory accommodation to pilot new technology while preserving core investor protections through eligibility limits, caps, disclosures, and sunsets. It is designed to gather evidence before considering formal rulemaking.

Federal securities disclosure rules refer to the periodic, transactional, and ongoing information obligations that inform investors and police fraud. Debate centers on delivery format and timing, not on removing antifraud safeguards.

Disclaimer: The information on this website is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency markets are volatile, and investing involves risk. Always do your own research and consult a financial advisor.
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