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SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce clarified that the agency’s upcoming tokenization framework will only cover real, asset-backed securities. Her statement followed growing speculation around a proposed SEC innovation exemption for tokenized equities, which Bloomberg previously reported could arrive this week. Peirce said the exemption would only apply to tokenized versions of existing public shares and would exclude synthetic stock tokens entirely.
According to Peirce, the proposed exemption only covers digital versions of equities already trading in secondary markets. She said those blockchain-based tokens must remain tied to actual ownership of the underlying securities.
Notably, Peirce rejected claims that the SEC planned to approve synthetic stock products. These tokens usually track stock prices without representing ownership rights, voting access, or dividend claims.
In a statement posted on X, Peirce described parts of the public discussion as “hyperbole.” She also directed observers to an earlier SEC statement issued in January that separated tokenized securities from synthetic products.
That earlier guidance explained that tokenized securities must remain linked to real financial assets. Meanwhile, synthetic instruments offering only price exposure fall outside that structure.
The clarification followed a Bloomberg report suggesting the SEC could allow blockchain-based stock tokens to trade on decentralized platforms. The report stated third parties outside traditional issuer control could issue those tokens.
However, Peirce responded directly to the speculation and stressed the exemption remains limited in scope. She added that synthetic products were never part of the framework currently under review.
Meanwhile, the SEC continues coordinating with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission on broader digital asset oversight. The discussions form part of a wider regulatory effort under SEC Chair Paul Atkins.
The SEC’s current approach distinguishes between issuer-backed tokenized equities and synthetic exposure products. Firms operating SEC-registered structures remain better positioned under the framework because they maintain official ownership records.
Meanwhile, synthetic platforms face closer scrutiny because investors may not receive direct ownership rights tied to underlying shares. Peirce said investors should avoid assuming final details before the SEC officially publishes the exemption proposal.
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