The New York Stock Exchange is laying the groundwork for one of the most consequential changes to US equity market infrastructure in decades.
The exchange announced plans to support tokenized securities and enable continuous, 24/7 trading. It’s an attempt to modernize how stocks trade, settle, and absorb information in a global financial system.
If successful, this shift could alter price discovery, settlement risk, liquidity behavior, and investor psychology across US markets.
NYSE’s plan centers on building a blockchain-based platform capable of supporting tokenized versions of traditional securities, including stocks and ETFs. These tokenized securities would represent real, legally recognized shares, backed one-to-one by the underlying asset and governed by existing US securities laws.
A tokenized share would still represent ownership in a public company, with the same economic and governance rights as a conventional share. The difference lies in how ownership is recorded and how trades settle.
Crucially, NYSE is not replacing the existing market overnight. Tokenized securities are designed to operate alongside traditional shares, with fungibility between formats over time.
So, this is a parallel system, not a forced migration.
Despite decades of technological progress, US equity markets still rely on a layered structure built for a pre-digital era. Trading, clearing, settlement, and custody are handled by separate entities, each maintaining its own ledger.
This structure introduces several problems. Capital is tied up during settlement windows. Counterparty risk persists until trades fully clear. Reconciliations between intermediaries add cost and operational risk.
finance.yahoo.com
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