
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has officially delayed its highly anticipated regulatory exemption for tokenized assets. The unexpected pause comes amid mounting concerns regarding third-party token issuers.
According to a Bloomberg Law report, SEC staff had already drafted the “innovation exemption” framework. The initiative is designed to act as a regulatory sandbox for blockchain-based equities. However, the agency paused the rollout to review critical feedback from major stock exchanges and market participants.
Despite the policy delay, the SEC has already granted limited approvals to several institutional giants:
Meanwhile, crypto-native firms like Ondo, Securitize, and Superstate are actively deploying SEC-registered transfer agents to bridge the gap.
SEC Chair Paul Atkins maintains that the agency will debut the regulatory sandbox soon, despite missing his initial end-of-year deadline. No final changes have been made to the core draft yet.
SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce clarified that the upcoming exemption will be strict and limited. It will only support digital versions of existing secondary market equities. The framework will completely exclude synthetic crypto assets that mimic stock prices without true ownership.
“The innovation exemption is focused on issuer-led tokens,” stated Robert Leshner, founder of Superstate. “Other approaches, such as permissionless synthetics, have received tremendous scrutiny.”
