
SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce references a staff statement on tokenization to distinguish between issuer-sponsored tokenized stocks and synthetic crypto instruments offering stock exposure.
SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce clarified her position on synthetics in crypto markets, directing observers to an SEC staff statement on tokenization that differentiates between multiple categories of token-based securities. Peirce’s statement draws a line between tokenized versions of issuer-sponsored stocks, tokenized stocks held by SEC-registered firms for customers, and synthetic instruments that provide exposure to equities without direct ownership.
The distinction carries regulatory significance as the crypto industry continues to develop tokenization infrastructure and synthetic asset protocols. Tokenized securities backed by issuers or regulated custodians fall into one category, while synthetic instruments—which provide price exposure through smart contracts or derivatives rather than direct token claims—occupy a separate regulatory space.
Peirce’s clarification addresses ongoing debate within the SEC and broader crypto regulatory framework regarding how different token structures should be classified and overseen. The commissioner has historically advocated for regulatory clarity and frameworks that accommodate blockchain-based innovation, making this distinction a notable marker in how the agency may approach emerging tokenization use cases.
Sources: Hester Peirce Twitter/X