DTC to Begin Tokenized Asset Rollout in July Before Full Launch

The Depository Trust Company, a subsidiary of DTCC, plans to begin its tokenized asset service rollout in July 2026, positioning the initial phase as a controlled debut ahead of a broader full launch.

What DTC announced about the July rollout

DTCC, the financial infrastructure giant that processes trillions of dollars in securities transactions annually, announced the development of a new tokenization service through its DTC subsidiary. The July rollout marks the first phase of availability rather than the finished product.

The service focuses specifically on tokenized assets, building on DTCC’s earlier work with Digital Asset to tokenize DTC-custodied U.S. Treasury securities. That December 2025 partnership laid the groundwork for the infrastructure now approaching its first live phase.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

  • DTC will begin its tokenized asset rollout in July 2026, ahead of a full launch at a later date.
  • The service builds on DTCC’s partnership with Digital Asset to tokenize U.S. Treasury securities held in DTC custody.
  • A phased approach signals controlled onboarding, with the July milestone serving as an initial availability window rather than the complete product.

Why DTC is rolling out before the full launch

The staged approach separates the July debut from the eventual full launch. July represents a limited-scope deployment, likely restricted in participant count or asset types, while the full launch will expand availability more broadly.

For a central securities depository handling the backbone of U.S. capital markets, a controlled rollout reduces operational risk. DTCC’s tokenization initiative page frames the effort as an extension of existing post-trade infrastructure rather than an experimental standalone product.

What remains unclear is the exact scope of the July phase: which asset classes beyond Treasuries will be included, how many participants will have access, and what the timeline is for the full launch. DTCC has not publicly detailed those parameters.

What the tokenized asset rollout could mean for the market

A tokenized asset service from DTC carries weight that most crypto-native tokenization projects do not. DTC is the registered clearing agency and central depository for virtually all U.S. equity and fixed-income securities, connecting blockchain-based asset handling directly to traditional market plumbing.

SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce addressed the regulatory dimension of DTC’s tokenization work in a statement on tokenization, noting the significance of the Division of Trading and Markets’ no-action letter related to DTC’s development. That regulatory engagement suggests the July rollout has already cleared initial compliance hurdles.

The move comes as major financial institutions continue expanding their digital asset infrastructure. Exchanges like Kraken’s parent company Payward have closed deals to expand U.S. derivatives offerings, while platforms such as Binance have introduced new security features to support institutional-grade custody. Meanwhile, Bitcoin’s price trajectory continues to draw institutional attention to digital asset markets more broadly.

For market participants watching the tokenization space, the key dates to track are the July rollout start and any subsequent announcements detailing the full launch timeline and expanded asset coverage.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

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Thiago Alvarez is a crypto and fintech analyst at Coinwy, covering blockchain payments, DeFi protocols, and digital asset regulation. With a background in financial technology and compliance analysis, Thiago focuses on evaluating the operational viability and regulatory positioning of emerging crypto projects. His work examines token economics, cross-border payment infrastructure, and institutional adoption trends across global markets.
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