BTCC / BTCC Square / Ambcrypto /
Why WFE Labels Tokenized Stocks as ’Mimics’ Threatening Market Integrity

Why WFE Labels Tokenized Stocks as ’Mimics’ Threatening Market Integrity

Author:
Ambcrypto
Published:
2025-08-26 17:00:19
7
2

World Federation of Exchanges sounds alarm on synthetic assets blurring regulatory lines.

Digital Doppelgängers Disrupt Traditional Markets

Tokenized stocks—digital replicas of traditional securities—face mounting scrutiny from global exchange operators. These blockchain-based instruments track prices without granting actual ownership rights, creating regulatory gray zones that keep compliance officers awake at night.

The Mimicry Mechanism

By mirroring Apple or Tesla shares through smart contracts, these tokens bypass conventional settlement systems. They offer 24/7 trading but divorce investors from corporate actions like dividends and voting rights—essentially creating financial theater without the underlying script.

Integrity Under Fire

Market watchdogs fear fragmented liquidity and surveillance gaps. When identical assets trade across decentralized platforms and traditional exchanges, price discovery mechanisms strain under contradictory pressures. It's like trying to conduct symphony with musicians in different time zones—technically possible but harmonically chaotic.

Traditional finance finally learns what crypto natives knew all along: if you can't beat the disruption, you definitely try to regulate it into submission.

Key Takeaways

Stock exchanges have warned that tokenized stocks are ‘copycats’ with no rights and protections as traditional shareholders. Will crypto lobby fight back?

Stock exchanges have urged regulators to crack down on ‘tokenized stocks’, calling them ‘mimics’ and ‘copycats’ that operate in grey areas. 

Under their global association, World Federation of Exchanges (WFE), the group said that the ‘mimics’ are not stocks and WOULD undermine market integrity if not reined in. 

“The emergence of unregulated platforms offering so-called tokenised equities raises serious concerns. These offerings often bypass established safeguards, creating risks for investors, undermining market integrity, and enabling regulatory arbitrage.”

On-chain stocks or ‘tokenized stocks’ have recently gained market interest after Robinhood debuted them for its European users to have access to the U.S equity market. 

Additionally, Backed Finance unveiled a similar offering (xStocks) in collaboration with Kraken and other Solana[SOL]-based platforms, including Jupiter.

Coinbase has also sought to list similar products. 

Will regulators heed WFE recommendations?

According to WFE, ‘tokenized stocks’ are derivatives with no retail protections whatsoever for buyers. 

In a letter to regulators, stock exchanges warned that the trend would lead to ‘fragmented liquidity’ and drive users away from exchanges. 

“Tokenised equities traded outside established and regulated venues may divert order FLOW from exchanges and other regulated venues, ultimately working against the interest of investors, especially retail.”

WFE CEO Nandini Sukumar emphasized that while the organization supports innovation, it expects tokenized stock issuers to meet the same rigorous oversight standards as traditional exchanges.

“These mimicked products do not meet the high standards which investors are used to.”

She further added,

“What we are seeing is a blatant attempt to circumvent regulation, with some firms seeking “no action” relief from regulators or deliberately operating through legal grey areas.”

tokenized stocks

Source: WFE

She added that retail investors will be misled into thinking that they hold the same rights as traditional shareholders, yet they don’t, and urged regulators to ensure innovation doesn’t expose retail investors to risk at the expense of tokenized stock issuers. 

“Investor protection must remain paramount, and regulation must evolve to ensure that new technologies are not used as a mask for risk and opacity.”

This is the second crypto innovation that’s facing pushback from TradFi players. 

Recently, a U.S. banking group, including the American Bankers Association and the Bank Policy Institute, called for the GENIUS Act amendment to seal a loophole that allows exchanges to pay interest on stablecoins. 

According to Alexander Grieve, VP of government affairs at Paradigm, the pushback signaled that TradFi firms were out to secure their turf, and the crypto lobby should prepare to fight back. 

tokenized stocks

Source: X

Subscribe to our must read daily newsletter

 

Share

|Square

Get the BTCC app to start your crypto journey

Get started today Scan to join our 100M+ users