For a long time, tokenized stocks felt like one of crypto’s most obvious ideas that somehow never fully arrived.
The technology worked well enough to demo, but the economics and integration were never quite convincing enough to matter at scale.
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That is starting to change now, and it is happening from two directions simultaneously.
What Felix and Ondo just built
Felix Protocol has launched more than 260 tokenized U.S. stocks and ETFs on HyperEVM, the smart-contract layer of the Hyperliquid ecosystem, using Ondo Finance’s Global Markets infrastructure as the underlying asset layer.
The assets are backed by real shares held off-chain through Ondo’s custodial structure, giving holders economic exposure to price movements and dividends.
Tokenized stocks and ETFs are now live on Felix
On-chain traders no longer have to off-ramp funds to gain exposure to US capital markets. Additionally, Felix users now have the ability to trade tokenized stocks/ETFs in large order sizes without the steep execution costs that… pic.twitter.com/LYu5XK31VL
— Felix (@felixprotocol) March 26, 2026
All without requiring users to off-ramp into a traditional brokerage account, create a separate custody arrangement, or navigate a different interface.
The launch is unavailable to U.S. users and those in other restricted regions, a standard constraint for tokenized equity products operating outside the U.S. regulatory perimeter.
The execution economics are what make this more than a feature announcement.
Felix claims orders of up to $1 million can be executed with net costs below 10 basis points, a threshold that directly targets one of the primary objections that has held tokenized equities back.
The argument that onchain equity execution is too expensive and too illiquid to serve serious trading needs.
Ondo Finance holds approximately $550 million in TVL across its tokenized stock products, representing roughly 59% of the entire tokenized equity market, which gives the Felix integration a liquidity foundation that earlier tokenized stock attempts have lacked.
Felix itself has grown from a lending protocol into the fifth-largest DeFi application on Hyperliquid’s Layer 1, with $167 million in TVL.
That is a clear sign that the platform already has a user base capable of absorbing a meaningful equity product launch.
What comes next for the product
The roadmap is arguably as interesting as the launch itself. Felix has said future iterations will add limit orders and dollar-cost averaging across tokenized assets, international equity markets covering South Korea, Japan, and India, and, maybe the most structurally significant item, the ability to use tokenized stocks and ETFs as collateral in Felix’s lending markets.
That last point is what transforms tokenized equities from a trading product into a building block.
Once a tokenized share can be posted as collateral to borrow against, it stops being a cheaper version of a brokerage account and starts functioning as programmable financial infrastructure.
This is the same shift that made stablecoins so foundational to DeFi once lenders started accepting them. And now it happens with tokenized stocks.
Why traditional market structure is converging on the same question
That crypto-native progress is landing at the same moment traditional finance is being forced to confront the same structural question.
TD Securities Vice President of U.S. Equity Market Structure Reid Noch published an analysis this week warning that Nasdaq’s tokenization plans could split equity trading into two parallel markets: the traditional, regulated U.S. exchange system and an offshore, blockchain-based venue layer that trades the same underlying assets under a different wrapper.
The TD Securities note identifies three concurrent tracks Nasdaq is pursuing: adapting post-trade clearing and settlement processes to handle tokenized shares, supporting companies in issuing tokenized shares directly, and promoting trading on offshore platforms.
Kraken’s xStocks platform is specifically cited as an example of the offshore venue tier, one that has already surpassed $25 billion in cumulative tokenized equity trading volume and grown roughly 150% since November.
The concern is concrete, not hypothetical. The DTC, the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation, which sits at the center of U.S. post-trade infrastructure, is currently targeting Q3 2026 for tokenization readiness, pending SEC approval.
If a tokenized version of the same stock is simultaneously tradable onchain on offshore venues at any hour and through traditional brokers during exchange hours, the result is price discovery happening across two non-integrated systems at once, with all the potential for arbitrage gaps, regulatory asymmetries, and custody complexity that implies.
New ways
The stock market may not “go crypto” through memecoins or speculation.
It may do it by quietly making Apple, Tesla, ETFs, and hundreds of other familiar exposures available in a cheaper, faster, and more programmable form, accessible outside trading hours, usable as collateral, and integrated into DeFi workflows that did not exist five years ago.
The practical implication is that the question is no longer whether tokenized stocks can work technically.
They can. Felix and Ondo have made the answer to that reasonably clear.
The open question, and the more consequential one, is whether the regulatory perimeter around the U.S. equity market adapts quickly enough to bring that infrastructure inside the tent, or whether it develops primarily offshore while the traditional system catches up.
That is a market structure question, not a technology one. And it is happening right now.
Cryptocurrency and Web3 expert, founder of Kriptoworld
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With years of experience covering the blockchain space, András delivers insightful reporting on DeFi, tokenization, altcoins, and crypto regulations shaping the digital economy.
📅 Published: March 28, 2026 • 🕓 Last updated: March 28, 2026
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