Picture a tokenization shop sliding from crypto Twitter watchlists to a New York Stock Exchange ticker. Not a thought experiment. This is the lane Securitize is trying to merge into right now.
On June 5, the SEC declared Securitize’s S-4 effective, teeing up a shareholder vote at Cantor’s SPAC later this month. If the votes line up, the company says it could ring in its debut days after. That would make Securitize one of the first pure-play tokenization firms to test public markets at scale.
The bigger question is not if they can list. It is what listing actually proves about tokenization’s staying power.
Tokenization has lived in pitch decks for years. The story finally has a potential Wall Street chapter: Securitize is trying to go public through a merger with Cantor Equity Partners II (CEPT). The SEC declared the Registration Statement on Form S-4 effective on June 5, 2026, moving the deal to the shareholder-vote stage (U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (Form 425)).
CEPT shareholders of record as of May 11 are scheduled to vote on June 29. If approved, the combined company is expected to trade on the NYSE under the symbol SECZ, with closing anticipated shortly after the vote (U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (Form 425)).
Why now? Rates are still doing heavy lifting, and tokenized T-bill and private credit products got traction with yield-hungry allocators. Banks and asset managers want compliant rails to move private assets faster. Regulators have also been more visible, which paradoxically gives institutional buyers more comfort. Securitize sits in the middle of that triangle: issuer tooling, compliance plumbing, and investor onboarding.
Securitize is best known for building a regulated stack around tokenized securities. Think transfer agent functions, broker-dealer licensing, and whitelisted distribution. The company reports it manages over $4 billion in tokenized real-world assets as of April 2026 (U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (Form 425) / Securitize press release).
That top-line number likely captures tokenized fund interests, private company stakes, income vehicles like credit, and cash-like assets. Not all of it trades daily on open venues. Some lives in permissioned markets with periodic liquidity windows. Still, $4 billion signals real enterprise pipelines, not just experiments.
The de-SPAC is the bridge from a private cap table to earnings calls and index screens. The path has clear waypoints.
They are not buying tokenized T-bills directly. They are buying an operating company that builds and operates compliant rails and marketplaces. The fundamentals to watch will be recurring platform fees, servicing margins, new issuer onboarding, and secondary-trading throughput. That is what turns a tokenization story into a cash-flow story.
Real-world assets that already fit regulated wrappers have led the adoption curve: cash-like instruments, credit vehicles, and fund interests. The pitch is simple. Faster settlement, programmable compliance, and global distribution without ditching the existing rulebook.
Asset bucket What is happening Who is buying Liquidity profile Cash-like (T-bills, money market exposures) Tokenized wrappers with KYC gating; frequent issuance Crypto-native treasuries, family offices, small funds High, but within permissioned venues and whitelists Private credit On-chain shares in SPVs or funds with reporting hooks Yield-seeking allocators comfortable with structure risk Periodic liquidity; transfer restrictions apply Private equity/secondaries Digitized cap tables and secondary windows for eligible buyers Accredited investors, wealth channels, institutional desks Infrequent, often scheduled windows Alternatives (real estate, art, infra) Project-by-project; heavy compliance lift Niche allocators; sponsor-led distribution Thin, deal-specific
Instant liquidity for illiquid assets, fully on-chain governance for regulated funds, and universal retail access. All possible in theory. In practice, most flows sit behind KYC walls and national rules. That is fine. It means tokenization is evolving as market infrastructure first, not a speculative airdrop machine.
If Securitize lists cleanly and trades well, it gives asset managers and banks a public comp for tokenization multiples. It could also validate compliance-first rails. CEPT holders get an exit vector. Issuers on the platform get brand lift and possibly deeper distribution if analyst coverage opens doors.
Smaller tokenization startups without regulatory licenses could see fundraising get harder. Traditional transfer agents and fund admins that were content to watch may need to ship digital rails faster. And some public chains might feel sidelined if issuers gravitate to permissioned or hybrid approaches that reduce protocol risk.
Redemption levels, PIPE closes, free float, and daily traded value. If liquidity is thin, volatility can overwhelm the narrative. Also watch the mix of revenues from one-off token launches versus ongoing servicing fees. The latter is what public investors usually reward.
Public status can change who returns calls. Large asset managers like visibility into counterparties. If Securitize can show clean audits, stable growth in compliant volume, and partners that stick, it may pull in bigger issuers that waited for a de-risking signal.
It could also reframe where value accrues. If tokenization becomes table stakes for private markets, the durable margins might sit in regulated market infrastructure, not necessarily in the base chains. That would tilt venture dollars toward compliance platforms and custody integrations, and less toward speculative consumer angles.
One more knock-on effect. A listed tokenization firm gives analysts and index providers a benchmark to track the category. Price targets and coverage notes are a language Wall Street understands. That can lift the entire segment if execution is there.
If you want a steady diet of filings, money flows, and which products are actually getting investors through the door, we track this beat daily at Crypto Daily. We try to separate shipping from storytelling.
It is among the first pure-play tokenization platforms to attempt a major U.S. listing via a SPAC merger. The category is young, and there are few clean public comps. Whether it becomes the first completed listing will depend on the CEPT vote and closing mechanics.
The SEC declared Securitize’s Registration Statement on Form S-4 effective on June 5, 2026. That allows CEPT to seek shareholder approval for the merger. It is not an endorsement of the business. It is a procedural milestone in the de-SPAC process (U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (Form 425)).
CEPT scheduled a special meeting for June 29, 2026, for shareholders of record as of May 11, 2026. If approved, the parties expect to close shortly after and list on the NYSE under SECZ, per filings. Timing can still shift based on closing conditions (U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (Form 425)).
Securitize told reporters it expects roughly $400 million in gross proceeds from the de-SPAC, including PIPE financing and after lower-than-expected redemptions, if the transaction closes as planned (CoinDesk).
It provides regulated infrastructure to issue, manage, and trade tokenized securities. That covers onboarding investors with KYC/AML, handling transfers and cap tables, and operating or connecting to compliant secondary markets. The goal is to keep assets inside the rules while using blockchain rails to lower friction.
Listing Securitize’s equity does not change securities laws. Access to tokenized private assets will still depend on eligibility, offering exemptions, and venue rules. Some products may be limited to accredited or qualified buyers.
In recent filings and press materials, Securitize states it manages more than $4 billion in tokenized assets as of April 2026. That figure aggregates multiple product types and does not imply uniform liquidity across them (U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (Form 425)).
Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

