Friday, January 23, 2026

The NYSE’s big tokenization plan is vaporware dressed up as innovation

In 1998, the world’s largest telecom, AT&T, cut a series of deals with a popular startup called Excite. By distributing Excite’s content and search tools over its giant cable network, the company believed it could extend its dominance into the emerging Internet era. Google, of course, had other plans and today its market cap is 20 times larger than AT&T.

I thought about AT&T as I read the New York Stock Exchange’s announcement of a new platform for tokenized securities. The news represents a watershed moment for blockchain since not only is NYSE an iconic brand, but its parent company ICE owns other exchanges and clearing systems all over the world. A firm of that caliber embracing tokenization means blockchain technology is finally going mainstream.

Add to this the likely prospect that Congress will pass legislation to integrate crypto services into the current financial system, and the future seems clear: Equities will be tokenized; regulators will oversee a new era of blockchain based issuance and trading, and the NYSE and its peers will lead the way.

Not so fast, though. The first two of these things will almost certainly come to pass, but that doesn’t mean the third one will as well. As with AT&T and the communications industry in the late 1990’s, there is no reason the NYSE’s dominance of the current era of finance means it is in position to dominate the next one.

In fact, there are good reasons to doubt this will be the case—starting with the tone of the NYSE’s announcement, which is chockful of hype and buzzwords but contains very little in the way of details.  If the exchange wanted to show it is serious about being a major player in the blockchain era of finance, it would address some obvious questions.

For starters, what blockchains and stablecoins does NYSE plan to support? Has its planned tokenized exchange decided upon programming languages, virtual machines, and token standards? This is just the beginning. The NYSE is also silent on what jurisdictions it will serve, and whether it will integrate decentralized tokens and DeFi tools. The announcement also says nothing about how NYSE itself intends to make money under a tokenized system.

The lack of details is even more curious given NYSE’s grand plans are “pending regulatory approvals.” Regulators would need answers to these questions more than anyone. When Galaxy Digital tokenized its own equity, it put out a lengthy report on the tricky particulars, and that is just one company. For a major exchange like NYSE, the considerations are far more complicated.

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