Injective announced Thursday that it has submitted a transfer agent registration to the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), aiming to integrate a core function of traditional securities markets onto blockchain technology.
Blockchain transfer agent role
Transfer agents are fundamental to US financial infrastructure, responsible for maintaining records of securities ownership and managing changes as shares are bought or sold. Injective, a layer-1 blockchain specializing in decentralized finance and tokenized real-world assets, stated that shifting these responsibilities onchain could offer a regulated means for issuing and managing tokenized assets within the current legal framework.
By pursuing SEC approval for this role, Injective would transition from simply offering blockchain infrastructure for tokenized assets to directly operating within regulated US securities markets. This move would allow the platform to help establish official ownership records for securities in a faster, more transparent manner than traditional systems currently provide.
Injective pointed out that onchain transfer agent capabilities may reduce existing delays and reconciliation steps among financial intermediaries. In a statement posted to X, the company wrote,
“Tokenized securities and RWAs need compliant ownership records on infrastructure that settles in less than a second,” while emphasizing its goal of delivering this service at scale in the United States.
Despite the announcement, Injective did not specify the legal entity behind the filing or publish a public SEC document. At the time of reporting, there was no independent verification of the application.
Mini dictionary: Transfer agent, a financial institution or company authorized to maintain records of securities ownership, process transfers, and handle related communications and dividend distributions for corporations and investors in regulated markets.
Industry-wide shift toward blockchain
Traditional finance participants have increasingly embraced blockchain to upgrade the infrastructure underpinning capital markets. Their initiatives reach well beyond just tokenizing assets, extending to functions such as securities issuance, settlement, and market data distribution.
Nasdaq, a leading US stock exchange, has been especially active in exploring blockchain partnerships. Last month, Nasdaq began distributing its proprietary TotalView market data—delivered in collaboration with Pyth, an onchain financial data network—to blockchain applications. Earlier this year, Nasdaq worked with Kraken, a global cryptocurrency exchange, and the tokenization platform Backed, to create connections between traditional equities and blockchain networks.
Intercontinental Exchange, which owns the New York Stock Exchange, has also partnered with Securitize to expand its tokenization strategy. This collaboration focuses on developing infrastructure for onchain stocks and exchange-traded funds (ETFs), targeting 24/7 trading accessibility and instant settlement.
In parallel, the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC), the main post-trade infrastructure provider for US securities markets, is working on its tokenized Collateral AppChain platform. This initiative is designed to automate collateral management and settlement across financial markets.
Mini dictionary: Pyth is a decentralized financial oracle network that delivers real-time financial market data to blockchain applications.
| Institution | Blockchain initiative | Objective |
|---|---|---|
| Injective | SEC transfer agent registration | Onchain securities record-keeping |
| Nasdaq | Pyth network partnership | Market data distribution to blockchain |
| Intercontinental Exchange | Securitize collaboration | Onchain stocks and ETFs, 24/7 trading |
| DTCC | Collateral AppChain | Automated collateral management |




