Injective drives tokenized equities onchain with $3.57B in daily trading volume

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Tokenized equities just posted $3.57 billion in daily trading volume, a record for a sector that barely existed two years ago. Injective, the Layer 1 blockchain built specifically for financial applications, sits at the center of that surge.

To put that number in perspective, the global equities market is worth roughly $134 trillion. Tokenized versions remain a rounding error in that context.

How Injective built the rails

Injective’s approach to tokenized equities revolves around its iAssets framework, which creates synthetic trackers for major companies. Think Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, and Amazon, all tradable as perpetual futures on the Helix decentralized exchange.

These aren’t actual shares of stock. You’re trading a price-tracking instrument that references the real equity price via oracles, without any physical settlement of underlying shares. It’s permissionless, meaning anyone with a wallet can access what used to require a brokerage account and a social security number.

The leverage options go up to 25x. By the first half of 2025, Injective had already crossed $1 billion in cumulative trading volume for tokenized stock perpetuals. The platform’s native RWA module launched back in January 2024, giving it a meaningful head start in building the infrastructure that’s now handling billions in daily flow.

The Republic partnership and pre-IPO plays

One of Injective’s more notable moves has been its collaboration with Republic to tokenize pre-IPO equity exposure. That partnership launched in August 2025 and generated approximately $1 billion in trading volume within its first 30 days.

On May 14, 2026, the platform announced a partnership with Musicow to tokenize music intellectual property rights, signaling that the team views its RWA infrastructure as a general-purpose engine, not just a stock-trading tool.

Regulatory tailwinds are real

CFTC-regulated futures for Injective’s native INJ token began trading on Bitnomial in April 2026, a milestone that signals the platform’s willingness to play within traditional compliance frameworks.

Broader regulatory momentum is also helping. Nasdaq has recently received approvals for tokenized trading initiatives, and ongoing SEC discussions are establishing compliance pathways for real-world assets onchain.

What this means for investors

The $3.57 billion daily volume figure is impressive, but the investment thesis here isn’t really about one day’s trading. Tokenized equities solve a genuine problem. Global stock markets operate on different schedules, require intermediaries for settlement, and restrict access based on geography and accreditation status. Onchain synthetics eliminate all three friction points simultaneously.

The risk, naturally, is that regulators decide synthetic equity trackers need to be treated like actual securities. If that happens, the permissionless nature of platforms like Helix would need significant modification. The SEC conversations happening right now will determine whether the current model survives or evolves into something more constrained.

There’s also counterparty risk embedded in oracle-based pricing. If the price feed for an Nvidia synthetic deviates significantly from the actual Nvidia stock price, traders on the wrong side of that gap eat the loss. Oracle failures are rare but not theoretical, and at 25x leverage, even small deviations get amplified quickly.

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