New York Stock Exchange President Lynn Martin offered deeper insight into the exchange’s move into tokenized markets during remarks at the World Liberty Forum in Palm Beach, Florida.
Martin framed the initiative not as a speculative experiment, but as an institutional responsibility.
According to her, the NYSE must respond to the growing momentum behind blockchain-based finance and the increasing demand from global investors for more flexible trading access.
Martin emphasized that as the world’s leading capital market operator, the NYSE cannot stand still while financial technology evolves. She described the exchange’s entry into tokenization as part of a broader effort to bridge traditional Wall Street protections with decentralized infrastructure.
The strategy, she said, represents a reinvention of market infrastructure rather than a short-term pilot. The exchange intends to apply lessons learned from past market stress events to ensure that any tokenized platform maintains strong liquidity, orderly trading, and systemic resilience.
In her words, this is about adapting core financial rails to meet the digital future — not replacing them.
Pending final approval from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the proposed venue would introduce several structural changes to equity trading.
The platform would allow continuous trading of U.S. equities and ETFs, giving international investors the ability to respond in real time to earnings announcements or macroeconomic events.
The system aims to move beyond the traditional T+1 settlement cycle toward near-instant, on-chain settlement. That shift could reduce counterparty exposure and capital inefficiencies tied to delayed clearing.
Transactions would be funded using regulated stablecoins, leveraging federal frameworks such as the GENIUS Act passed in 2025.
Tokenized shares would remain fully interchangeable with traditionally issued securities. Dividend rights, voting privileges, and governance structures would remain intact, preserving the legal characteristics of existing equities.
The NYSE is developing the platform alongside its parent company, Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), and major financial institutions.
BNY Mellon and Citi are collaborating on tokenized deposit mechanisms designed to streamline margin management and cross-border funding flows.
Technologically, the system will integrate with the NYSE’s existing Pillar matching engine, enabling standardized execution protocols across multiple blockchain custody and settlement layers.
This approach suggests continuity rather than disruption: tokenization layered on top of established exchange architecture.
Martin concluded by stating that tokenization “will seep into every market,” calling it one of the most consequential transformations of financial infrastructure this century.
The NYSE’s move signals that blockchain-based settlement is transitioning from experimental side projects to core exchange-level implementation.
If regulatory approval is granted, the development could mark the first time a major U.S. equity exchange formally integrates 24/7 tokenized trading into its primary infrastructure, a step that may redefine how global capital markets operate in the coming decade.
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