Regulated digital securities platform tZERO has integrated its tokenization infrastructure with the Aptos blockchain, paving the way for institutional issuers to mint and manage real-world asset tokens directly on the high-throughput Layer 1, according to a report from ChainCatcher.
The collaboration aims to fuse tZERO’s compliant issuance and transfer tooling with Aptos’ low-latency architecture, targeting banks, asset managers and fintechs that want RWAs on-chain without abandoning securities regulations.
While tZERO has not yet published a dedicated press release on the Aptos tie-up, the New York-based firm recently emphasized that its strategy is to build “blockchain-powered multi-asset infrastructure” for regulated markets as it launched a private marketplace for Web3 secondaries. “Our initial focus with this asset class is on secondary liquidity and launching a fully regulated, licensed private marketplace for the trading of private and traditionally illiquid Web3 assets,” tZERO CEO Alan Konevsky said in April, adding that the platform is “purpose-built for institutional buyers and sellers.”
According to Aptos, the network is already home to “more than $540M in tokenized assets,” placing it among the “Top 3 chain[s] for RWAs” with over a dozen live tokenized products from six providers. Data cited by Aptos shows that protocols like PACT Protocol have helped push on-chain RWA value to roughly $542 million, with 13 distinct assets held by 2,434 addresses as of late June 2025, after a 57% rise in 30 days.
In a separate overview of RWA tokenization, crypto.news reported that Aptos’ RWA total value locked jumped to $542 million, driven by deployments from issuers such as Berkeley Square of the PACT Consortium, BlackRock’s BUIDL and Franklin Templeton’s BENJI token. That growth has helped Aptos close the gap with Ethereum, which still leads with nearly $7.6 billion in tokenized RWAs but has seen momentum shift as asset managers test alternative high-performance chains.
The integration with tZERO also follows the company’s March memorandum of understanding with tokenization provider Stobox to “align their capabilities in primary issuance and regulated brokerage and trading environments,” as detailed in a recent tZERO announcement. Together, these moves suggest tZERO is positioning itself as a regulated hub for both primary RWA issuance and secondary liquidity across multiple chains, while Aptos continues to court institutional tokenization flows and climb RWA rankings highlighted in prior story coverage.
As institutions seek compliant ways to tokenize credit portfolios, funds and other off-chain assets, the tZERO–Aptos link-up underscores how regulated infrastructure and high-throughput chains are converging to move trillions in traditional assets onto public ledgers.

