DTCC safeguards more than $114 trillion in securities, making it one of the most important pieces of financial market infrastructure. Every day, it records ownership and settles transactions involving stocks, bonds and other securities. Rather than creating new digital assets, DTCC’s system converts existing securities into blockchain-based “digital twins” that retain the same legal ownership, dividend and governance rights as the underlying assets.
That distinction separates DTCC’s approach from many tokenized stock offerings available today.
Some crypto platforms issue tokenized “wrappers” that mirror a stock’s price but do not necessarily provide investors with the legal rights associated with owning the underlying shares.
DTCC’s model instead allows institutions to convert existing securities between traditional electronic records and blockchain-based tokens without changing ownership.
“They’re the ones who are flipping from one settlement regime to the next,” Mark Wendland, CEO of Canton Strategic Holdings, said in an interview. “I cannot understate the importance of a firm like DTC piloting and doing these real transactions given the role they play in U.S. financial markets.”
Throughout the day, participants demonstrated several use cases. JPMorgan converted holdings of the Invesco QQQ Trust ETF into tokenized assets before using tokenized collateral to satisfy central counterparty margin requirements with CME Group. DTCC also processed tokenized Treasury transactions, equity trades and collateral pledges, while the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust, one of the world’s largest ETFs, was also tokenized during the event.


















