Wall Street’s back-office backbone is going on-chain. The Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation, better known as the DTCC, is kicking off a tokenization pilot in July 2026 that covers Russell 1000 stocks, major index ETFs, and U.S. Treasuries.
The DTCC’s subsidiary, DTC, currently holds custody over more than $114 trillion in securities. When an institution that size starts tokenizing assets, the rest of the financial world pays attention.
What is actually happening here
This pilot is not about launching new crypto tokens. The DTCC is digitizing existing securities entitlements, meaning the stocks, ETFs, and Treasuries already sitting in DTC custody are getting a blockchain-native representation. The legal rights, the dividends, the voting entitlements, the risk treatment, all of it stays the same. What changes is the plumbing underneath, how those positions are recorded, transferred, and settled.
Today’s securities settlement runs on a T+1 cycle, meaning trades finalize a full business day after execution. The DTCC’s tokenized system is designed to settle continuously, around the clock, without waiting for market hours to begin or end.
The Russell 1000 index covers the largest 1,000 publicly traded companies in the United States. Pairing that with Treasuries and index ETFs means the pilot focuses entirely on assets with deep liquidity.
The regulatory green light and who is involved
The SEC issued a No-Action Letter on December 11, 2025, authorizing a three-year pilot for this structure. That letter is the legal foundation that lets the DTCC run tokenized trades under existing securities law without requiring new legislation.
More than 50 major financial firms have joined the industry working group backing this initiative. BlackRock, Goldman Sachs, and JPMorgan are among the participants. Ripple is also part of the group. The working group’s focus is on interoperability across different token standards, explicitly working to prevent fragmentation where competing systems cannot communicate with one another.
The limited production phase begins in July 2026, with a full-scale launch of the DTC tokenization service targeted for October 2026.
What this means for markets and investors
Continuous settlement is the most immediate implication for traders. The current T+1 cycle means capital sits locked in transit for a day between trade and settlement. Eliminating that lag frees up liquidity, reduces counterparty risk, and could lower the margin requirements that brokers impose to cover settlement exposure.
A tokenized infrastructure opens the door to fractional ownership at institutional scale, programmable dividend distributions, and eventually, securities that can interact directly with decentralized finance protocols without a custodian sitting in the middle of every transaction.
The DTCC is modernizing a custody and settlement infrastructure that has not fundamentally changed since the 1970s. Projects focused on real-world asset tokenization, cross-chain interoperability, and institutional-grade custody rails now have a concrete, high-profile use case to point to when making the argument that this technology has a place in regulated markets.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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