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#USHouseAdvancesTokenizedSecurities
The House Financial Services Committee just held a hearing on tokenized securities, and the room had a pretty clear consensus on where this is heading — even if the politics got messy fast.
Lawmakers across the aisle broadly agreed that tokenized securities need the same guardrails as traditional ones. That sounds boring, but it is actually a significant moment. It means Congress is no longer debating whether tokenization is legitimate — it is debating how to regulate something it has already accepted as inevitable. Two draft bills were on the table, the Modernizing Markets Through Tokenization Act of 2026 and the Capital Markets Technology Modernization Act of 2026, both aimed at updating market structure for the on-chain era.
The backdrop matters too. The SEC under Paul Atkins is close to issuing a formal rule proposal on tokenized securities. The agency recently opened a time-limited sandbox pathway for trading tokenized equities on-chain. The SEC and CFTC also issued a rare joint interpretation clarifying which crypto assets are securities versus commodities — a framework the industry has been demanding for years.
On the market side, tokenized real-world assets are already past the $26 billion mark globally, with tokenized Treasury debt alone topping $11 billion. Nasdaq, DTCC, and BMO are all moving. The infrastructure case is largely made.
What is still missing is the Main Street story. The institutional plumbing is being laid down fast, but no one in the room has convincingly explained why a regular investor should care. If tokenization just makes the backend faster while the front-end experience stays identical, most people will never notice it happened.
The Trump family's deep involvement in digital asset ventures — including a deal with Securitize to tokenize loan revenue tied to hotel projects — kept surfacing as a political complication. Democrats are watching that conflict of interest closely, and it is the kind of noise that can slow down otherwise bipartisan momentum.
The direction is clear. The timeline and the fine print are still very much up for debate.