DTCC Begins Tokenizing Stocks and Treasuries With BlackRock, JPMorgan, and Goldman Sachs

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Last Updated:

July 16, 2026

Three towering financial skyscrapers labeled BlackRock, JPMorgan, and Goldman Sachs stand apart along a waterfront skyline at golden sunset

DTCC Begins Tokenizing Stocks and Treasuries With BlackRock, JPMorgan, and Goldman Sachs

Three towering financial skyscrapers labeled BlackRock, JPMorgan, and Goldman Sachs stand apart along a waterfront skyline at golden sunset

DTCC Begins Tokenizing Stocks and Treasuries With BlackRock, JPMorgan, and Goldman Sachs

The Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation (DTCC) ran its first tokenized securities event on Wednesday, July 15, 2026, converting shares and Treasuries into blockchain-based tokens alongside major institutions including JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, BlackRock, Vanguard, and the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), as first reported by The Wall Street Journal (WSJ).

What Happened and Why It Matters

Nearly 40 financial institutions and technology providers took part. JPMorgan tokenized a portion of its Invesco QQQ Trust holdings to kick off the day, and tokenized assets across the event included shares of Microsoft and Circle, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust, iShares’ short-term Treasury ETF, and Treasuries of varying maturities.

Nadine Chakar, DTCC’s global head of Digital Assets, said in a statement that Wednesday marked “the beginning of a long journey” and that the goal was to “build the foundation that would lead to a scalable launch come October.”

DTCC is the central post-trade organization in the US financial system, processing $4.7 quadrillion in securities transactions in 2025. Its depository subsidiary, DTC, holds more than $114 trillion in securities and operates the new tokenization service under a no-action letter the SEC granted DTC (Depository Trust Company) in December 2025, built on DTCC’s ComposerX platform.

Brian Steele, DTCC’s president of clearing and securities services, framed the effort as “bridging TradFi and DeFi so that capital markets are built on the same infrastructure that has underpinned global financial markets for decades.”

For context, a tokenized share trading on this kind of infrastructure does not necessarily confer the same legal ownership rights as holding the underlying security directly. For more background on how tokenized securities are being treated by US regulators more broadly, our previous coverage of Nasdaq’s tokenized securities push with the SEC covers a parallel regulatory track.

What Comes Next

DTCC has said full service will launch in October 2026, at which point institutions holding assets at the clearinghouse will be able to convert selected securities into tokens more broadly. The event arrives amid accelerating momentum for tokenized real-world assets generally.

RWA protocols surpassed $10 billion in total value locked in May 2025, and Robinhood launched Robinhood Chain, an Ethereum layer-2 network built for tokenized stocks and ETFs, earlier this same month. Our coverage of DeFi adoption growth mirrors the institutional momentum seen in other tokenization efforts.

What this means for you: this is infrastructure-layer news affecting how institutions settle trades, not a new way for retail investors to buy tokenized shares today, so the practical impact for most readers will depend on how DTCC’s October rollout reaches investor-facing products.

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Rickie Sanchez

Author

Rickie Sebastian Sanchez is a content writer and researcher with four years of experience covering the crypto markets. His work has appeared in outlets including Blockzeit, CryptoFlash.Report, Cryptomaten, and CoinAlarm.ai, where he has built a reputation for clear, research-driven reporting on fast-moving market developments. At UseTheBitcoin, Rickie focuses on crypto and TradFi news, airdrop guides, and newsletter management. He holds multiple certifications from Binance Academy and is also a completer of Bitget’s Blockchain4Youth Learning Hub Program. Rickie holds BTC.