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Tokenized Stocks Crossed $800M Milestone

Tokenized Stocks Crossed $800M Milestone

Tokenized stocks— blockchain-based representations of traditional equities like Tesla, Nvidia, Apple, and others have reached a significant milestone, with on-chain monthly trading volume hitting a record high of approximately $800 million.

This figure comes from recent market analysis shared by The Kobeissi Letter and echoed across crypto analytics sources. It reflects rapidly growing liquidity as traditional finance (TradFi) assets migrate on-chain, enabling 24/7 trading, fractional ownership, instant settlement, and global access without traditional market hour restrictions.

Platforms like Jupiter Exchange on Solana are handling nearly $200 million of that monthly volume alone, capturing a substantial share ~25%. Robinhood has described tokenized assets as an “unstoppable freight train” heading toward major markets.

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Nasdaq is actively pushing for SEC approval to enable tokenized stock trading, with comments from their crypto chief indicating they’re “moving as fast as they can” this was noted about two months prior to the latest surge.

This comes amid broader growth in real-world assets (RWAs): Total tokenized public stocks value is now in the range of $800M–$1.2B market cap/TVL figures vary by source, with some reports showing surges like 2,500% year-over-year growth.

Leading platforms include xStocks via BackedFi and Ondo Finance, with popular tokens mirroring high-demand names like TSLAx (Tesla), NVDAx (Nvidia), and indices like SP500/SPYX. Solana has been a dominant chain for tokenized stock activity in some periods, flipping others like Ethereum in volume share due to low fees and high speed.

The trend signals accelerating convergence between TradFi and crypto/DeFi, driven by regulatory progress, institutional interest from players like Robinhood, Coinbase, Kraken, and Ondo, and demand for efficient, borderless exposure to equities. However, risks remain, including regulatory hurdles, custody concerns, potential for synthetic and fake tokens, and market volatility.

This is part of the larger RWA boom, where tokenized assets overall are expanding liquidity and accessibility—quietly reshaping finance at a historic pace. Tokenized stocks are digital tokens on a blockchain that represent ownership in — or economic exposure to — traditional company shares like Apple, Tesla, Nvidia, or ETFs tracking indices such as the S&P 500.

They bridge traditional finance (TradFi) and blockchain/DeFi, allowing equities to be traded, held, and used in ways not possible on conventional stock exchanges. Tokenized stocks are part of the broader Real-World Assets (RWAs) category, where off-chain assets get represented on-chain. The process typically follows these steps.

A regulated entity (custodian, issuer, or special purpose vehicle) holds the actual shares or provides the backing. This is usually done 1:1 — meaning one tokenized stock corresponds to one real share or a fraction thereof.

Token Issuance

The issuer creates digital tokens via smart contracts on a blockchain commonly Solana for speed/low fees, Ethereum for maturity, or others like BNB Chain/TON. These tokens are ERC-20-like or equivalent and track the real stock’s price using oracles like Chainlink price feeds for accurate, real-time valuation.

Direct/1:1 backed models most common today: Real shares are custodied off-chain by regulated institutions like banks or broker-dealers. Proof-of-reserves via Chainlink or audits verifying the backing. Tokens mirror price movements, dividends often passed through, and corporate actions.

Some older/simpler versions were synthetic derivatives tracking price without holding shares, but these carry higher risks and are less dominant now. Trading and Usage Tokens trade 24/7 on crypto platforms, centralized like Kraken, Bybit, Bitget; decentralized like Jupiter on Solana.

Fractional ownership is easy (buy 0.1 of a Tesla token). Instant settlement (T+0 vs. traditional T+1 or T+2). Global access without traditional brokers or market-hour limits. Composability: Use in DeFi (collateral for loans, liquidity pools, yield farming). Redemption (if supported).

Holders can sometimes redeem tokens for the underlying shares or cash equivalent, depending on the issuer’s rules and regulations. 1:1 custody of real shares; token represents economic rights (price, dividends) Token = legal share ownership on-chain (rarer, more complex).

Leading examples in 2026 include: xStocks by Backed Finance, often on Solana: Dominates retail volume; tokens like TSLAx, NVDAx, AAPLx; live on Kraken, Bybit, and DeFi. Ondo Global Markets: Multi-chain (Ethereum, Solana, etc.); strong institutional push; high TVL. Others: Securitize, Dinari, emerging Nasdaq and Coinbase efforts.

Fractional shares ? lower entry barriers. Global, permissionless access non-U.S. users often prioritized due to regs. Transparency via blockchain ledger. Treated as securities in many jurisdictions; availability often excludes U.S. persons due to SEC rules. Platforms comply variably, Swiss/EU issuers common for xStocks.

Relies on the issuer/custodian holding real shares. Manipulation or delays could affect accuracy. No full voting rights in most cases. Combines stock market + blockchain volatility.

Tokenized stocks represent the accelerating fusion of TradFi equities with blockchain efficiency. As of January 2026, the sector has grown rapidly (hundreds of millions to billions in value/volume), driven by platforms like xStocks and Ondo, signaling a shift toward more accessible, always-on global equity markets — though still early and regulation-dependent.

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