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Ondo Presses HCFS to Acknowledge Active Tokenized Securities Markets - Crypto Economy
TL;DR
Tokenization has been discussed in Washington so long that it can still sound hypothetical, even as markets keep expanding outside the United States. Ondo Finance is pushing back against that framing. In an open letter addressed to the House Financial Services Committee, the company argued that tokenized securities are not a future concept waiting for policy permission, but an active market operating today. The message is pointed: lawmakers risk debating tokenization as theory at the very moment it is becoming infrastructure, distribution, and market access in products available beyond U.S. borders.
Why Ondo wants policymakers to treat tokenization as present tense
At the center of the letter is a simple claim. Ondo says the key policy mistake now would be to regulate as if tokenized securities markets do not yet exist. The firm argues that activity is growing, particularly outside the United States, and points to Ondo Global Markets as evidence that regulated securities can live on blockchain rails. In that framing, tokenization is not a lab exercise or a pilot frozen in committee language. It is a functioning market model forcing questions about access, liquidity, settlement, and investor reach across jurisdictions.

That distinction matters because it changes the policy lens. If markets are live, then the debate is no longer whether tokenization should be allowed to begin, but how the United States responds to a shift underway elsewhere. Ondo’s letter urges the committee to move from abstraction to market structure. That means recognizing that blockchain-based securities are being distributed, held, and traded in settings, and that delay in acknowledging this could leave U.S. policy reacting to foreign-market momentum rather than shaping domestic standards from a position of leadership and regulatory clarity.
The broader argument is as much strategic as technical. Ondo is pressing Congress to treat tokenization as an active competitive development, not a speculative talking point. By emphasizing that the “upgrade is live,” the company is trying to anchor the discussion in deployment rather than distant promise. The implication is difficult to miss: capital markets are beginning to migrate onto blockchain rails, and the jurisdictions that recognize that earliest may define the rules, access patterns, and infrastructure expectations that others later inherit. In that sense, the letter is not merely descriptive. It is a warning shot to policymakers.