The Securities and Exchange Commission has unveiled a proposal to dismantle two established stock market regulations that industry analysts argue have prevented tokenized American equities from operating on decentralized finance platforms.
These regulations — identified as 611 and 610(e) within Regulation NMS — were established in 2005. Rule 611 prevents trade execution at prices inferior to the optimal available quote across any trading venue. Rule 610(e) prohibits market venues from displaying quotations that lock or cross against quotes on competing platforms.
The public commentary period of 60 days has commenced.
Alex Thorn, serving as head of research at Galaxy Digital, outlined why these regulations represented an insurmountable obstacle for tokenized equity trading within cryptocurrency markets.
Automated market makers — the algorithmic systems driving decentralized exchanges — function by executing transactions against liquidity pools at current pool-determined prices. These systems lack the capability to query Nasdaq pricing. They cannot suspend a transaction due to superior pricing availability elsewhere. Under the framework of Rule 611, every transaction becomes a regulatory violation.
Rule 610(e) presented identical challenges. AMMs perpetually adjust pricing based on transaction flow, resulting in quotes that would regularly lock or cross the National Best Bid and Offer — activity that current regulations mandate exchanges prevent.
Should the regulations be eliminated, the SEC is anticipated to depend on a “best execution” framework under FINRA Rule 5310 instead. This approach is principles-oriented and applies at the broker level, making it compatible with AMM operational models.
Jaret Seiberg, who serves as managing director at TD Cowen’s Washington Research Group, indicated the proposal will likely receive approval. The rule is expected to reach finalization during Q1 2027.
However, Seiberg suggested that tokenization pilot projects may not face delays until that date. He anticipates the SEC will grant early-stage tokenization initiatives exemptive relief from Rule 611 prior to official repeal.
This regulatory proposal forms part of the SEC’s comprehensive “Project Crypto” initiative, introduced in August 2025, designed to establish more definitive regulations for digital assets and blockchain technology within American markets.
Thorn observed that additional obstacles persist, including exchange registration requirements, clearance and settlement protocols, and regulations not designed for decentralized trading environments. He indicated these matters may be resolved through an upcoming SEC “innovation exemption.”
The SEC had previously planned to unveil a tokenized stock trading framework last month but postponed the release following objections from stock exchanges regarding execution concerns.
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