Trust Wallet Shatters Barriers: Global Users Gain Instant Access to Tokenized Stocks and ETFs
Breaking down the walls of traditional finance—Trust Wallet just dropped a bombshell that lets you trade tokenized versions of major stocks and ETFs directly from your phone.
No more waiting for market hours or dealing with legacy brokers. This move puts Wall Street in your pocket, 24/7, with the same security you expect from one of crypto's most trusted wallets.
Global access? Check. Instant settlement? You bet. Plus, it’s all wrapped in the decentralized ethos that made crypto revolutionary in the first place.
Sure, regulators might squirm—but when has that ever stopped progress? Another step toward making traditional finance look like a relic. (And let’s be real: the old guard could use the nudge.)
Expanding access to RWAs
According to Trust Wallet, the initiative marks “the next era of global investing,” bringing more assets, chains, and access to its users. The RWA tokens represent blockchain-based versions of traditional assets like equities and ETFs. These tokens track the price of the underlying securities but do not grant shareholder rights such as voting or dividends.
Introducing: Tokenized stocks & ETFs 🌎
Trust Wallet is now the first self-custody wallet to unlock access to RWAs — starting with tokenized stocks & ETFs on Ethereum.
200M+ people can now swap $USDC into real-world assets like any other token — on Mobile & Extension.
Enabled… pic.twitter.com/IPuMDXrsaR
— Trust Wallet (@TrustWallet) September 3, 2025
The program is currently powered by Ondo Finance and 1inch, enabling users to trade tokenized assets in the same way they WOULD with cryptocurrencies. Trust Wallet emphasized that availability may be restricted by region, with U.S., U.K., and EU users excluded from accessing these tokens due to regulatory limitations.
READ MORE:Compliance and risks
The company reminded users that tokenized assets carry market risk, with prices subject to volatility like any other investment. Tokens are issued and supported by third-party providers, and Trust Wallet urged users to review its Terms of Service and Risk Disclosures before participating.