The quiet build-out of infrastructure for tokenized real-world assets just got a new builder. Dinari, a platform that mints blockchain-based shares of U.S. companies, and tZERO, a regulated alternative trading system, have joined forces to offer a white-label solution that lets other firms issue tokenized equities without having to piece together the regulatory and technical stack themselves. The partnership, detailed in a recent announcement , arrives at a moment when multiple players are rushing to define how blockchain-based U.S. stocks should function at scale.
What makes the Dinari-tZERO link-up different from earlier experiments is the emphasis on a turnkey model. Rather than operating as a standalone exchange or a single-issuer product, the platform will allow broker-dealers, fintechs, and asset managers to create their own tokenized stock offerings under a regulatory framework. The combination of tZERO’s broker-dealer license and alternative trading system with Dinari’s tokenization engine creates a package that could lower the barrier to entry significantly.
That matters because tokenized equities have been around in one form or another since at least 2018, but they’ve mostly remained niche. Fragmented liquidity, unclear custody rules, and inconsistent compliance standards kept these products on the fringes. tZERO itself has spent years navigating securities law, while Dinari brought tokenized Apple, Tesla, and other stocks to Arbitrum in a format that required users to pass KYC and comply with local restrictions. Now the pair is betting that bundling these capabilities will attract institutional interest that has been sitting on the sidelines.
Previous attempts at tokenized equities, including Binance’s stock tokens and FTX’s briefly traded equity derivatives, collapsed under regulatory pressure or platform failures. The Dinari-tZERO approach is deliberately different—it avoids the exchange model and instead sells the underlying toolkit, potentially insulating itself from the risks that sank earlier efforts. If the platform can deliver compliant, always-on trading for U.S. stocks on blockchain rails, it could unlock a market that stock exchanges have been slow to address.
The infrastructure race is accelerating
The tokenization of traditional assets has crossed from pilot projects to live deals. A recent weekly tokenization roundup noted that on-chain real-world assets have surpassed $20 billion, driven by everything from U.S. Treasuries to corporate debt. But equities, with their fragmented market structure and strict securities regulations, have lagged behind fixed-income tokenization. This turnkey platform is a direct attempt to address that gap.
Dinari’s legal architecture, which relies on Reg D and Reg S exemptions, has allowed it to offer tokenized stocks to non-U.S. investors and accredited U.S. investors without running headfirst into SEC registration requirements. tZERO brings an SEC-registered ATS, which can handle secondary trading. Together, they model a path that many crypto-native tokenization projects have struggled to build. The question now is whether that path is scalable enough for the wave of demand that could hit if regulatory clarity improves.
Regulatory haze keeps the market guessing
While the infrastructure builders are laying tracks, Washington has not yet decided where the train is allowed to go. The largest crypto bill in U.S. history is four days from a Senate vote, with banking groups pushing for last-minute changes that would strip key provisions. The outcome of that legislation could redraw the map for tokenized securities—and turnkey platforms like this one would either find themselves with a clear road or a new set of legal obstacles.
The U.S. regulatory environment is not the only variable. Tokenized U.S. equities marketed to international investors raise cross-border compliance questions that no single platform can fully answer. The European Union’s MiCA framework does not directly cover equities, and Asian regulators have taken a cautious approach. The Dinari-tZERO platform may be turnkey on the technology side, but its users will still need to navigate a country-by-country licensing puzzle.
What the market is watching next
Beyond the press release, traders and protocol developers will be looking for signs that the partnership can actually bring new liquidity on-chain. The critical metric will be whether the platform attracts more than the handful of firms already comfortable with tokenized assets. If a mid-size broker-dealer with an existing client base adopts the white-label solution, it would be a stronger signal than any pilot announcement.
The second thing to watch is chain selection. Dinari currently operates on Arbitrum, but a white-label product might need to support multiple blockchains to satisfy user preference. That could mean deeper integration with Ethereum layer-2s or even non-EVM chains. If the platform remains tied to a single network, it risks the same fragmentation that has plagued tokenized equities for years.
Finally, the broader market sentiment toward real-world asset tokenization is still forming. The total value locked in RWA tokens has grown, but equity tokens remain a fraction of that market. A successful turnkey platform could shift the conversation from ‘can we do it?’ to ‘who is doing it at scale?’—exactly the shift that early infrastructure builders are betting on.