U.S. banking regulators have clarified how banks should treat tokenized securities under existing capital rules. The agencies confirmed that blockchain-based instruments will receive the same treatment as traditional securities. The guidance reinforces a technology-neutral approach and addresses growing bank interest in tokenization.
The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System released the guidance with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. The agencies issued a set of frequently asked questions to clarify capital requirements. They stated that the capital framework remains “technology neutral” in its design and application.
Regulators explained that banks should treat tokenized securities like their traditional counterparts when legal rights match. They said, “The technologies used to issue and transact in a security do not generally impact its capital treatment.” The agencies also confirmed that the blockchain structure does not alter capital requirements.
The guidance states that banks should not assign different treatment based on blockchain type. Regulators said banks must apply consistent rules to permissioned and permissionless networks. This position reinforces equal regulatory handling across distributed ledger platforms.
The agencies issued the clarification in response to increased industry engagement. Banks and financial institutions have explored blockchain-based financial infrastructure in recent years. Therefore, regulators provided direct answers to common supervisory questions.
Regulators defined tokenized securities as digital representations of traditional assets such as stocks and bonds. These instruments record ownership and transfers on distributed ledger systems. However, they continue to represent existing financial claims.
The agencies stated that identical legal rights determine capital treatment. If a token grants the same rights as a traditional security, banks must apply identical capital standards. This approach aligns tokenized assets with current prudential rules.
The clarification also addressed financial collateral eligibility under capital regulations. Eligible tokenized securities may qualify as financial collateral if they meet regulatory definitions. Banks may then recognize them as credit risk mitigants under existing rules.
Regulators emphasized that all other capital requirements must remain satisfied. Banks must continue to assess counterparty credit risk and operational standards. The agencies did not introduce new capital rules through this guidance.
The FAQs confirm that existing prudential standards govern tokenized securities exposures. Regulators did not create separate treatment for blockchain-based issuance models. Instead, they reinforced current supervisory expectations for regulated institutions.
The agencies stated that the framework adapts to technological developments without structural change. They clarified that distributed ledger usage alone does not trigger different capital calculations. Therefore, banks must apply established capital rules consistently.
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