Cantor Fitzgerald and Securitize have formed a partnership to modernize initial public offerings and follow-on stock offerings through blockchain technology. The collaboration creates a pathway for public companies to raise capital through established financial markets while issuing the resulting securities as regulated blockchain-based tokens. Cantor will contribute its equity capital markets and trading capabilities, while Securitize will provide the infrastructure needed to issue, distribute, and manage tokenized shares.
The agreement represents a major expansion of tokenization beyond funds and secondary-market trading. Rather than converting existing securities into blockchain representations after they have already been issued, the companies plan to integrate tokenization directly into the capital-raising process. This could allow future public companies to launch traditional and on-chain shares through the same regulated offering.
Most tokenized stock products currently represent securities that were first issued through traditional systems and later placed on blockchain rails.
The Cantor and Securitize partnership takes a different approach by bringing blockchain technology into:
This means tokenization could become part of a company’s public offering from the beginning instead of being added as a separate product afterward.
Cantor Fitzgerald will handle the traditional financial side of the partnership through its experience in equity underwriting, public offerings, trading, and institutional capital markets.
That expertise gives participating companies access to established investors and regulated market infrastructure while allowing blockchain-based ownership and settlement to operate alongside the conventional offering.
The model is designed to let companies use blockchain without giving up access to the traditional capital markets that remain essential for large public fundraising rounds.
Securitize will provide the regulated technology used to create, distribute, and service the tokenized securities.
The company has become one of the leading infrastructure providers for tokenized real-world assets, supporting blockchain-based funds, private investments, and public securities. Through this partnership, its technology will be integrated directly into the issuance process for public companies.
The companies said the goal is to improve operational efficiency while modernizing how securities ownership is recorded and maintained.
One of the most important features of the partnership is its issuer-sponsored model.
The tokenized shares are intended to represent the actual securities issued by the company rather than:
This distinction gives investors a direct legal connection to the underlying security while allowing ownership records and settlement activity to operate through blockchain infrastructure.
The collaboration could eventually give companies another way to raise capital and reach investors.
Potential advantages include:
These benefits could reduce administrative friction throughout the life cycle of a public security, from the initial sale of shares to later transfers and corporate actions.
The announcement arrives as some of the largest financial institutions in the world increase their investment in blockchain-based capital markets.
The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation recently expanded its own tokenized securities work with firms including JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, BlackRock, and Vanguard. The parallel initiatives suggest that tokenization is moving beyond isolated experiments and toward the core infrastructure used to issue, trade, and settle traditional securities.
Cantor and Securitize are extending that trend directly into IPOs, one of the most important processes in global capital formation.
The partnership is not attempting to replace stock exchanges, investment banks, or securities laws.
Instead, it combines blockchain infrastructure with the existing framework used for public offerings. Companies would still operate under established capital markets regulations while gaining access to blockchain-based issuance, ownership, and servicing tools.
This hybrid approach may be more attractive to regulators and institutional investors than products that attempt to operate completely outside traditional financial systems.
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