The New York Stock Exchange announced on January 19, 2026, that it is developing a new platform designed to enable the trading and on-chain settlement of tokenized securities, marking a significant step toward merging traditional equity markets with blockchain infrastructure.
The initiative is aimed at supporting round-the-clock trading of U.S.-listed equities and ETFs, moving beyond the NYSE’s traditional market hours and aligning stock market operations more closely with crypto-native trading models.
Core Features of the New Platform
According to the exchange, the platform is being built to replicate the full economic rights of traditional securities while leveraging blockchain-based settlement systems.

Key capabilities include:
- •24/7 trading access, allowing investors to trade equities and ETFs at any time
- •Immediate, on-chain settlement, replacing delayed post-trade clearing with tokenized capital
- •Fractional share trading, including orders sized in specific dollar amounts
- •Stablecoin-based funding and transfers, enabling continuous liquidity movement
- •Full shareholder rights, with tokenized holders retaining dividends and governance rights identical to conventional shares
The NYSE emphasized that tokenization will not alter the legal or economic ownership structure of securities, only the way they are traded, settled, and transferred.
Technical Design and Regulatory Path
The platform will combine the NYSE’s existing Pillar matching engine, the core system that currently powers its high-speed equity trading, with private blockchain networks for post-trade settlement. The design supports multi-chain settlement and custody, allowing interoperability with different blockchain ecosystems rather than locking activity into a single ledger.
Execution of the project is subject to regulatory approval from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, with which the NYSE confirmed it is already in active discussions. If approved, the venue would support both natively issued digital securities and tokenized versions of existing listed shares.
Broader Institutional Infrastructure Push
The move is part of a wider digital asset strategy by the NYSE’s parent company, Intercontinental Exchange (ICE). In parallel, ICE is working with major financial institutions including BNY Mellon and Citigroup on infrastructure to support tokenized deposits.
That collaboration is focused on helping clearing members manage liquidity and margin requirements outside traditional banking hours, addressing one of the key frictions that arises when markets move toward continuous trading.
Together, the initiatives signal that the NYSE is positioning itself for a future where equity markets operate continuously, settlement happens instantly, and blockchain infrastructure becomes a core component of U.S. capital markets rather than a parallel system.

