Recent regulatory developments in Australia have shifted the tide on licensing requirements for DeFi services. The passage of the Corporations Amendment (Digital Assets Framework) Bill 2025 received a Royal Assent on April 8, 2026.
One particular change stands out: the clarity on non-custodial DeFi protocols and asset tokenization. Firms seeking to offer tokenized assets now don’t need licensing for settlements.
As firms seek out solutions that remain non-custodial, yet legally compliant, Redbelly is already there.
The core of this shift lies in the newfound clarity surrounding the classification of digital asset platforms (DAPs). Recent Australian legislative updates provide a critical distinction: non-custodial digital token infrastructure is not inherently a traditional financial product or service.
What this means is that protocols and networks offering completely decentralized services do not require traditional clearing and settlement licenses.
This change recognizes that decentralized infrastructure operates on fundamentally different mechanics than centralized financial intermediaries, allowing for a more efficient, code-driven approach to market operations.
The significance of this transition cannot be overstated. For institutional players, the primary deterrent to blockchain adoption has been the risk of regulatory drift, the fear that a platform might suddenly be reclassified in a way that makes its use illegal or operationally impossible.
The Australian regulatory change provides a stable foundation. It defines the "rules of the road" for Public Digital Token Infrastructure, allowing founders and institutions to build with confidence.
For Redbelly, this legislation validates a long-held thesis: that the future of finance lies in a hybrid model where decentralized, non-custodial infrastructure is supported by robust identity and permissioning layers.
Redbelly is positioned to help firms tokenize and offer their assets. Because Redbelly operates as a high-performance, non-custodial protocol, it fits squarely into the new regulatory category that bypasses the need for traditional clearing and settlement licenses.
This allows the network to provide the speed and finality of modern blockchain technology while remaining compliant with the domestic legal landscape. It is no longer a matter of working around the law, but rather working with a law that finally recognizes the utility of decentralized networks.
The viability of this model is supported by a specialized ecosystem that manages the complexities of identity, permissioning, and issuance. The synergy between Redbelly and its core components, Averer and Tokeniser, creates a comprehensive environment for regulated digital assets.
Averer plays a pivotal role as a Network Accredited Issuer. It tackles the primary challenge of ensuring participants are known and verified without compromising the decentralized nature of the protocol. By verifying businesses and ensuring they meet the necessary standards, Averer ensures offerings are from legitimate, accountable entities.
Tokeniser handles the permissioning and issuance of tokens, ensuring that any digital asset deployed on Redbelly adheres to the specific constraints required by the issuer or the regulator.
While the regulatory changes bring in clarity, the confusion of whether the blockchain layer is acceptable or not remains a point of contention. The success of a network is determined by its ability to fit into specific, legally defined categories. Australia's recognition of Public Digital Token Infrastructure provides the necessary clarity to move DeFi into the mainstream.
Redbelly, supported by the identity capabilities of Averer and the issuance precision of Tokeniser, stands ready to lead this shift. By removing the license-heavy bottlenecks of the past, this new regulatory framework enables a faster, more transparent, and more efficient financial future. The infrastructure is no longer quiet; it is active, regulated, and open for business.
And Redbelly stands at the forefront.