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DLT Tokenization

DLT Tokenization

Tracking Dlt Tokenization legal and regulatory developments.

5 entries in DLT & Tokenization Tracker

LawSnap Briefing Updated May 11, 2026

State of play.

  • The SEC has executed a structural pivot from enforcement to rulemaking. The April 2026 Howey interpretive guidance designates Bitcoin, Ether, Solana, XRP, and a dozen other major assets as digital commodities outside the securities framework, and the Division of Trading and Markets has issued a safe harbor for covered user interfaces — the first concrete regulatory pathway for DeFi infrastructure (→ Do Crypto User Interface Providers Need to Register as Broker-Dealers with the SEC? The Staff Offers Its View).
  • The GENIUS Act's implementation machinery is running. Treasury's NPRM establishing "substantially similar" standards for state stablecoin regimes is in public comment, and institutional infrastructure — including a government money market fund designed to satisfy GENIUS Act reserve requirements — is already live .
  • The Clarity Act is moving toward a Senate floor vote, having cleared the House with 294 bipartisan votes; the Senate Banking Committee has taken up markup, with Treasury and the Trump administration pressing for enactment before the July 4th recess .
  • Tokenized securities are reaching operational infrastructure. Broadridge has gone live with on-chain proxy voting for tokenized equities on Avalanche, with Galaxy as the first adopter — moving corporate governance mechanics onto blockchain rails .
  • For counsel advising digital asset issuers, exchanges, DeFi protocols, or institutional investors, the practical baseline has shifted from managing enforcement risk to building compliance architecture under an emerging federal framework — but the five-year sunsets on interim guidance and the open comment periods mean the structure is not yet final.

Where things stand.

  • Asset classification has a new operative framework. The SEC's April 2026 interpretive guidance establishes five categories — digital commodities, digital collectibles, digital tools, stablecoins, and digital securities — and explicitly designates a dozen-plus major assets as commodities outside the securities laws; the CFTC has endorsed the parallel Commodity Exchange Act analysis .
  • The broker-dealer registration question for DeFi infrastructure is answered — provisionally. The SEC's April 13, 2026 staff statement creates a safe harbor for covered user interfaces (self-custodial wallet tools, browser extensions, DeFi front-ends) that do not custody funds, route orders, negotiate transactions, or provide investment advice; the safe harbor sunsets in five years absent further SEC action (→ Do Crypto User Interface Providers Need to Register as Broker-Dealers with the SEC? The Staff Offers Its View).
  • Stablecoin regulation has a federal statutory floor. The GENIUS Act, enacted in 2025, established the first federal framework for payment stablecoin issuers; Treasury's April 2026 NPRM defines when state regimes qualify as "substantially similar," creating a dual-track authorization structure for issuers under $10 billion .
  • Market structure legislation is the next major legislative vector. The Clarity Act would establish SEC/CFTC jurisdictional boundaries and operating rules for trading platforms; it has passed the House and is advancing in the Senate with administration backing .
  • State-level enforcement is running in parallel through consumer protection. Eight states have enacted virtual currency kiosk laws with transaction limits, fee caps, money transmitter licensing, and fraud refund rights; Indiana has banned kiosks entirely; nearly 30 states have active legislative proposals .
  • On-chain corporate governance infrastructure is operational. Broadridge's live on-chain proxy voting platform for tokenized equities — with Galaxy as the first adopter — signals that tokenized securities are reaching the point where existing corporate governance obligations must be discharged through blockchain-native mechanisms .
  • Regulatory talent is migrating to industry. Former CFTC Chair Chris Giancarlo departed Willkie Farr for full-time fintech advisory work; former acting CFTC Chair Caroline Pham joined MoonPay as CLO — a pattern that tracks the current policy environment and shapes the advisory networks clients will rely on .

Latest developments.

  • SEC Division of Trading and Markets issues safe harbor statement for covered user interfaces — DeFi front-ends, wallet providers, and browser extensions that meet specified conditions do not require broker-dealer registration; safe harbor expires in five years (→ Do Crypto User Interface Providers Need to Register as Broker-Dealers with the SEC? The Staff Offers Its View).
  • Treasury NPRM establishes "substantially similar" criteria for state stablecoin regimes under the GENIUS Act, coordinated across OCC, Federal Reserve, FinCEN, and OFAC; 60-day comment period open .
  • Senate Banking Committee takes up markup of the Clarity Act, the market structure bill that passed the House 294-to-bipartisan, with administration backing for enactment before July 4th recess .
  • Coinbase announces agreement on the stablecoin yield provision in pending federal crypto legislation, removing a key obstacle to Senate advancement .
  • Institutional stablecoin infrastructure goes live: a major financial institution launches the MSNXX Stablecoin Reserves Portfolio, a government money market fund designed to satisfy GENIUS Act reserve requirements and generate yield; JPMorgan, BofA, Citi, Wells Fargo, and PNC form a working group on stablecoin initiatives .
  • Eight states have enacted virtual currency kiosk laws in 2026; Wisconsin and Utah among the latest; Indiana becomes the first state to ban kiosks entirely; nearly 30 states have active proposals .
  • SEC issues interpretive guidance classifying crypto-assets under a five-category Howey framework, explicitly designating Bitcoin, Ether, Solana, XRP, and others as digital commodities; CFTC endorses the parallel analysis .
  • SEC Chairman Atkins launches Material Matters podcast with Commissioners Peirce and Uyeda, signaling principles-based rulemaking orientation and SEC-CFTC coordination on spot crypto trading rules .
  • Broadridge goes live with on-chain proxy voting for tokenized equities on Avalanche; Galaxy is the first adopter .
  • Chris Giancarlo departs Willkie Farr for full-time fintech and crypto advisory work .

Active questions and open splits.

  • Borderline asset classification under the new Howey framework. The SEC's five-category guidance explicitly designates major assets but leaves application to borderline tokens and future issuances to forthcoming staff guidance; the "common enterprise" prong and secondary-market treatment remain contested at the margins .
  • Safe harbor boundary conditions for DeFi infrastructure. The covered user interface safe harbor turns on whether a platform crosses into custody, order routing, transaction negotiation, or investment advice — lines that are fact-intensive and not yet tested in enforcement or litigation; the five-year sunset creates a planning horizon that does not resolve structural uncertainty (→ Do Crypto User Interface Providers Need to Register as Broker-Dealers with the SEC? The Staff Offers Its View).
  • Federal vs. state authorization for stablecoin issuers. Treasury's "substantially similar" NPRM will determine whether state-level authorization becomes a viable alternative to federal chartering for sub-$10B issuers — but the final rule's treatment of capital, liquidity, and redemption standards will drive the competitive dynamic between state and federal tracks .
  • Stablecoin yield mechanics under the Clarity Act. The Coinbase-announced deal on the yield provision resolves one obstacle, but the final statutory language governing how stablecoin rewards are treated — and whether yield-bearing stablecoins trigger securities analysis — remains to be enacted and interpreted .
  • On-chain governance obligations for tokenized securities. Broadridge's live proxy voting platform establishes that on-chain governance is technically feasible, but the legal framework for discharging SEC proxy rules, record-date mechanics, and beneficial ownership through blockchain-native systems has not been formally addressed by the SEC .
  • State kiosk regulation and federal preemption. With eight states having enacted divergent kiosk regimes and nearly 30 more active, multi-state operators face a patchwork of transaction limits, fee caps, and licensing requirements that may or may not align with FinCEN/BSA federal obligations — and no federal preemption framework has been established .
  • SEC-CFTC jurisdictional allocation for spot crypto trading. The Clarity Act would draw the line, but until enacted and interpreted, the boundary between SEC and CFTC authority over spot markets for assets that are not clearly commodities or securities remains operationally uncertain .

What to watch.

  • Senate floor action on the Clarity Act — whether it reaches a vote before the July 4th recess and what the final SEC/CFTC jurisdictional boundary language looks like.
  • Treasury's final rule on GENIUS Act "substantially similar" standards — the comment period closes and final rule will determine whether state authorization is a viable path for mid-sized stablecoin issuers.
  • SEC staff guidance on application of the five-category Howey framework to borderline assets and new token issuances.
  • Whether the SEC extends, modifies, or allows the covered user interface safe harbor to lapse at the five-year mark — and whether enforcement actions test the safe harbor's boundaries before then.
  • Expansion of on-chain proxy voting and whether the SEC issues guidance on discharging proxy obligations through blockchain-native mechanisms as more issuers tokenize equity.
  • State kiosk legislation in the remaining 20-plus active jurisdictions — particularly whether any federal preemption provision is included in the Clarity Act or addressed by FinCEN rulemaking.

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