One in every of Wall Avenue’s most secure and most tightly regulated belongings is inching onto the blockchain, as an ETF issuer seeks approval to tokenize a part of the U.S. Treasury market with out altering how traders commerce or maintain the fund.
Abstract
- This isn’t only a one-off experiment with TBIL. The push to convey conventional monetary belongings onto blockchains — usually known as tokenization of real-world belongings (RWAs) — has gained important momentum previously yr.
- Main companies and banks are launching tokenized merchandise.
- BlackRock’s digital liquidity fund has scaled rapidly on Ethereum, and JPMorgan lately launched a tokenized money-market fund for institutional traders.
F/m Investments, which runs the $6.3 billion US Treasury 3-Month Invoice ETF (TBIL), has requested the Securities and Trade Fee (SEC) for permission to file some present ETF shares on a blockchain.
The agency filed for permission on Jan. 21.
The proposal would depart the fund’s holdings, ticker and buying and selling unchanged, whereas permitting tokenized and standard shares to coexist with equivalent charges, rights and disclosures.
If accepted, the transfer would place short-term treasuries as a real-world check case for bringing blockchain-based possession data into the center of regulated securities markets—on regulators’ phrases fairly than exterior them.
This isn’t only a one-off experiment with TBIL. The push to convey conventional monetary belongings onto blockchains — usually known as tokenization of real-world belongings (RWAs) — has gained important momentum previously yr.
Main companies and banks are launching tokenized merchandise.
BlackRock’s digital liquidity fund, for instance, has scaled rapidly on Ethereum, and JPMorgan lately launched a tokenized money-market fund for institutional traders.


