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Understanding tokenization: A comparison of the DTCC model and the direct ownership model

Summary: On one side is the modernization and upgrading of infrastructure, while on the other side is innovation at the ownership level.
BlockBeats
2025-12-22 20:29:13
Collection
On one side is the modernization and upgrading of infrastructure, while on the other side is innovation at the ownership level.

Original Title: DTCC Isn't Tokenizing Shares, Here is What's Actually Changing

Original Author: @ingalvarezsol

Original Compilation: Peggy, BlockBeats

Editor's Note: The "tokenization" promoted by DTCC is not about putting stocks on the blockchain, but rather a digital upgrade of security entitlements, with the core goal of enhancing the efficiency and settlement capabilities of the existing market system. In parallel, there is a more radical path that tokenizes stock ownership itself, reshaping self-custody and on-chain composability.

The two models are not in opposition but serve to stabilize scalability and functional innovation, respectively. This article attempts to clarify this distinction and points out that the real change is not about one replacing the other, but about investors beginning to have the right to choose different ownership models.

Here is the full text:

Introduction: Tokenization, but not the kind you think

The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) has received a no-action letter from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), allowing it to begin tokenizing its securities infrastructure. This is a significant upgrade to the "underlying pipeline" of the U.S. capital markets: DTCC holds approximately $99 trillion in securities assets and supports trading volumes in the tens of trillions of dollars annually.

However, the market reaction surrounding this news reveals a clear gap between expectations and reality. What is being tokenized is not "stocks," but security entitlements, and this difference determines the nature of almost all subsequent issues.

Currently, discussions around "tokenized securities" do not indicate a single future arriving in its entirety, but rather two different models emerging simultaneously at different levels: one is to transform the holding and circulation of securities within the existing indirect holding system; the other fundamentally reshapes what it means to "hold a share of stock."

Note: For ease of expression, the following text will not distinguish between DTCC's subsidiary DTC (Depository Trust Company) and its parent company DTCC.

How Current Securities Ownership Actually Works

In the U.S. public markets, investors do not directly hold stocks with the listed companies. Stock ownership is placed within a chain of multiple intermediaries.

At the bottom level is the issuer's shareholder register, typically maintained by a transfer agent. For almost all listed stocks, this register usually records only one name: Cede & Co., the nominal holder designated by DTCC. This is done to avoid the issuer having to maintain records for millions of individual shareholders.

One level up is DTCC itself. It "freezes" the physical circulation of these stocks through centralized custody. DTCC's direct participants are called clearing brokers, who act on behalf of retail brokers facing end customers, responsible for custody and settlement. What DTCC records in the system is: how many stocks each participant "is entitled to."

At the top level is the investor themselves. Investors do not hold specific, distinguishable stocks but rather possess a legally protected security entitlement—this is their claim of rights relative to the broker; the broker, in turn, holds the corresponding entitlements in the DTCC system through clearing brokers.

What is being tokenized this time are these "entitlements" within the DTCC system, not the stocks themselves.

This upgrade can indeed enhance system efficiency, but it cannot solve the fundamental limitations posed by the multi-layered intermediary structure itself.

DTCC tokenizes "claims of rights," while the direct model tokenizes "the stocks themselves." Both are referred to as "tokenization," but they address completely different issues.

Why Upgrade?

The U.S. securities system itself is quite robust, but its structure still has obvious limitations. Settlement relies on processes that have time delays and are limited by working hours; corporate actions (such as dividends and stock splits) and reconciliations are still primarily completed through batch processing messages rather than shared states. Since ownership is nested within a complex network of intermediaries—each layer having its own pace of technological upgrades—real-time workflows are nearly impossible to achieve without simultaneous support from all levels, and DTCC is the key "gatekeeper" in this system.

These design choices also bring about capital occupation issues. Longer settlement cycles require tens of billions of dollars in margin to manage risks between trade execution and final settlement. These optimization solutions were originally designed for a world where "capital transfers are slow and costly."

If settlement cycles can be shortened, or if instant settlement can be achieved for voluntary participants, the required capital scale will significantly decrease, costs will drop, and market competition will intensify.

Some of the efficiency gains can be achieved by upgrading existing infrastructure; however, others—especially those involving direct ownership and faster innovation iterations—require an entirely new model.

Tokenization of the Existing System (DTCC Model)

In the DTCC path, the underlying securities remain in centralized custody and continue to be registered under Cede & Co. The real change is in the expression of entitlement records: these "entitlements," which originally existed only in proprietary ledgers, are given a "digital twin" token that exists on an approved blockchain.

This is important because it achieves a modernization upgrade without disrupting the existing market structure. DTCC can introduce 24/7 entitlement transfers among participating institutions, reduce reconciliation costs, and gradually promote these entitlements towards faster collateral liquidity and automated workflows, while still retaining the efficiency advantages of centralized systems such as net settlement.

Multilateral netting can compress total trading activities worth trillions of dollars into a final settlement amount of only a few hundred billion dollars. This efficiency constitutes the core of today's market structure, even as new ownership models gradually emerge.

However, the boundaries of this system are intentionally set. These tokens do not allow holders to directly become shareholders of the company. They remain as permissioned, revocable claims of rights, existing within the same legal framework: they cannot become freely composable collateral in DeFi, cannot bypass DTC's participating institutions, and will not change the issuer's shareholder register.

In short, this approach optimizes our existing system while fully retaining the existing intermediary structure and its efficiency advantages.

Tokenization of "Ownership Itself" (Direct Model)

The second model begins precisely where the DTCC model cannot reach: it tokenizes the stocks themselves. Ownership is directly recorded on the issuer's shareholder register and maintained by the transfer agent. When tokens are transferred, the registered shareholders change accordingly, and Cede & Co. is no longer part of the ownership chain.

This unlocks a series of capabilities that are structurally impossible under the DTCC model: self-custody, direct relationships between investors and issuers, peer-to-peer transfers, and programmability and composability combined with on-chain financial infrastructure—including collateral, lending, and many new financial structures yet to be invented.

This model is not just theoretical. Shareholders of Galaxy Digital can already tokenize their equity through Superstate and hold it on-chain, directly reflected in the issuer's equity structure. By early 2026, Securitize will also provide similar capabilities, introducing 24/7 trading under the support of compliant brokerage systems.

Of course, the trade-offs of this model are also real. Once detached from the indirect holding system, liquidity will tend to fragment, and the efficiency of multilateral netting will disappear; services like margin and lending will need to be redesigned; operational risks will shift more to the holders themselves rather than the intermediaries.

But it is precisely the agency brought by direct ownership that allows investors to actively choose whether to accept these trade-offs rather than passively inherit them. Within the DTCC framework, this choice space is almost nonexistent—because any innovation regarding "entitlements" must sequentially pass through layers of governance, operations, and regulation.

There are key differences between these two models. The DTCC model is much more compatible and scalable with the existing system, while the direct ownership model opens up greater space for innovations like self-custody.

Why They Are (Temporarily) Not Competing Visions

The DTCC model and the direct ownership model are not competing routes; they address different problems.

DTCC's path is an upgrade to the existing indirect holding system, retaining core advantages such as net settlement, liquidity concentration, and systemic stability. It is aimed at institutional participants who require scalable operations, settlement certainty, and regulatory continuity.

The direct ownership model meets another type of demand: self-custody, programmable assets, and on-chain composability. It serves investors and issuers who seek new functionalities, not just a "more efficient pipeline."

Even if direct ownership may reshape market structures in the future, this transition will inevitably be a multi-year process that requires simultaneous advancement in technology, regulation, and liquidity migration; it cannot happen quickly. The pace of clearing rules, issuer behavior, participant readiness, and global interoperability is far slower than the technology itself.

Therefore, a more realistic prospect is coexistence: one side is the modernization upgrade of infrastructure, while the other side is innovation at the ownership level. Today, neither side can replace the other in fulfilling its mission.

What This Means for Different Market Participants

These two tokenization paths have different impacts on market participants at various levels.

Retail Investors

For retail users, the DTCC upgrade is almost imperceptible. Retail brokers have long shielded users from most frictions (such as fractional shares, instant purchasing power, weekend trading), and these experiences will still be provided by brokers.

The real change comes from the direct ownership model: self-custody, peer-to-peer transfers, instant settlement, and the possibility of using stocks as on-chain collateral. Today, stock trading has begun to appear through some platforms and wallets, but most implementations still rely on "wrapping/mapping" forms. In the future, these tokens may directly become real stocks on the register, rather than synthetic layers.

Institutional Investors

Institutions will be the biggest beneficiaries of DTCC's tokenization. Their operations heavily rely on collateral circulation, securities lending, ETF fund flows, and multi-party reconciliations—areas where tokenized "entitlements" can significantly reduce operational costs and increase speed.

Direct ownership is more attractive to some institutions, especially opportunistic trading firms seeking programmable collateral and settlement advantages. However, due to liquidity fragmentation, broader adoption will gradually unfold from the market's periphery.

Brokers and Clearing Institutions

Brokers are at the center of the transformation. Under the DTCC model, their role is further strengthened, but innovation will gravitate towards them: clearing brokers that adopt tokenized entitlements first can create differentiation, while vertically integrated institutions can directly build new products.

In the direct ownership model, brokers are not "removed" but reshaped. Licensing and compliance remain necessary, but a batch of native on-chain intermediaries will emerge, competing with traditional institutions for users who value the characteristics of direct ownership.

Conclusion: The Real Winner is "Choice"

The future of tokenized securities does not lie in one model prevailing over the other, but in how the two models evolve in parallel and connect with each other.

Entitlement tokenization will continue to modernize the core of public markets; direct ownership will grow in the margins that value programmability, self-custody, and new financial structures. The switch between the two will become increasingly seamless.

The ultimate result is a broader market interface: existing tracks become faster and cheaper, while new tracks emerge to support behaviors that the existing system cannot accommodate. Both paths will produce winners and losers, but as long as the path of direct ownership exists, investors are the ultimate winners—gaining better infrastructure through competition and having the right to freely choose between different models.

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