Fidelity Files SEC Letter Pushing for Crypto Market Infrastructure

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9 Min Read


Regulations

Fidelity Investments wants the SEC to stop stalling and start building. In a formal letter submitted March 20, 2026, the $18 trillion asset manager called on the regulator to establish a framework allowing broker-dealers to offer, custody, and trade crypto assets on Alternative Trading Systems – a move that would plug digital assets directly into mainstream market infrastructure.

Key Takeaways

  • Fidelity has formally asked the SEC to let broker-dealers offer, custody, and trade crypto on regulated trading systems
  • Tokenized RWA distributed value stands at $26.48B, with U.S. Treasury debt making up nearly half
  • Ethereum dominates RWA networks with $15.3B – pulling $845M in net inflows over the past 30 days

In the letter Fidelity laid out specific demands: clear standards for tokenized securities, updated reporting rules for decentralized finance platforms, and explicit guidance permitting distributed ledger technology for recordkeeping – without triggering “clearing agency” classification in the process.

The tokenization issue is particularly thorny. Under current SEC guidelines, tokenizing an asset changes its format, not its legal status. A security remains a security after it hits a blockchain. But what rights token holders actually get remains murky. Issuer-sponsored tokens – where the company directly links the token to its official shareholder register – carry full ownership and voting rights. Third-party tokens often provide little more than price exposure, with no voting rights and considerably more counterparty risk.

Fidelity’s push also takes aim at DeFi. Traditional financial reporting requirements were built around centralized institutions. Decentralized platforms have no central authority to produce those reports, and the firm is urging the SEC to rewrite the rules accordingly.

Institutional Money Is Watching

This isn’t about retail. Fidelity’s interest is in creating the legal and operational conditions under which major capital allocators can enter the space without regulatory ambiguity hanging over every transaction. Estimates put the potential institutional capital unlocked by a clear U.S. framework at up to $5 trillion by end of 2026. Compliance costs are rising in parallel – firms are reportedly allocating 20 to 30 percent of their budgets to regulatory and audit requirements under new U.S. and MiCA regimes.

Fidelity’s researchers noted that Bitcoin went essentially nowhere in 2025. Their call for 2026: a new class of traditional money managers enters the space. Whether that happens at scale depends almost entirely on the infrastructure being built – or not built – right now.

Market Maturity, Regulatory Clarity and RWA Boom

The regulatory push from Fidelity doesn’t exist in isolation. Traditional finance has been moving toward digital assets on multiple fronts — and the data is starting to reflect it.
Kraken’s parent company Payward announced it is working with Nasdaq to build infrastructure for issuing and trading tokenized stocks and ETFs — and became the first crypto-related firm to gain access to the Fed’s payment infrastructure. These aren’t fringe developments. They signal that the boundary between traditional markets and digital assets is being dismantled from both sides.

Most major exchanges have moved in the same direction, expanding access beyond pure crypto into tokenized equities and commodities. The infrastructure for broader asset exposure is being built in real time.

With new frameworks reshaping the industry, fresh capital is entering the market. Regulatory clarity, the global stablecoin push, tokenization, and AI integration are turning what was once a purely speculative space into something that looks increasingly like a parallel financial system — one that trades 24/7.

The composition is revealing. According to data from RWA.xyz, U.S. Treasury debt dominates at $11.84 billion – nearly half the total. Commodities follow at $5.06 billion, then asset-backed credit at $3.15 billion. Real estate, frequently cited as tokenization’s biggest long-term opportunity, sits at just $292 million. The gap between the narrative and the actual numbers remains wide.

Ethereum holds the commanding network position at $15.3 billion in distributed RWA value. BNB Chain comes in at $3.2 billion, Solana at $1.7 billion, Stellar at $1.4 billion. Flow data over the past 30 days reinforces Ethereum’s dominance – $845 million in net inflows, with BNB Chain close behind at $808 million and Solana adding $398 million. Not every chain is gaining: XRP Ledger shed $68 million and Liquid Network lost $156 million over the same period.

Stablecoin value across tracked networks stands at $300.79 billion – down 2.4% over 30 days – while the holder count grew to 239.36 million, up 5.05%. Falling value alongside growing holders suggests either consolidation or a shift toward smaller positions. Neither reads as a clear signal of strength.

The data reflects a market that has found real traction in government debt and commodities while most theoretically compelling use cases – real estate, private equity, venture capital – remain marginal. That’s precisely the gap the current regulatory push is meant to close.

On the Sidelines: CFTC Moves

Worth noting separately: the SEC and CFTC recently issued a joint interpretive release that reclassified 16 major tokens – including XRP, SOL, and ADA – as digital commodities rather than securities. The CFTC now oversees spot markets for those assets; the SEC retains authority over crypto securities. Staking and wrapping non-security tokens were confirmed as generally falling outside securities law.

The CLARITY Act hit a bipartisan agreement in principle on March 20 around stablecoin yields, potentially clearing its Senate path. The GENIUS Act, passed in July 2025, is already in implementation – the OCC and Treasury are drafting final stablecoin licensing rules, expected by mid-2026.

These are meaningful developments, but they’re downstream of the core question Fidelity is raising: without proper market infrastructure, classification alone doesn’t move institutional capital. The rails still need to be built.


The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Coindoo.com does not endorse or recommend any specific investment strategy or cryptocurrency. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.

Author

Alex is an experienced financial journalist and cryptocurrency enthusiast. With over 8 years of experience covering the crypto, blockchain, and fintech industries, he is well-versed in the complex and ever-evolving world of digital assets. His insightful and thought-provoking articles provide readers with a clear picture of the latest developments and trends in the market. His approach allows him to break down complex ideas into accessible and in-depth content. Follow his publications to stay up to date with the most important trends and topics.



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