Circle's SeedInvest Takes Step Toward Tokenizing Stocks With Trading License

SeedInvest, the equity crowdfunding platform owned by crypto startup Circle, just got a license to facilitate trading of traditional securities.

AccessTimeIconApr 26, 2019 at 2:00 p.m. UTC
Updated Sep 13, 2021 at 9:06 a.m. UTC
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Equity fundraising platform SeedInvest, which was recently acquired by cryptocurrency startup Circle, can now operate as an alternative trading system (ATS), the companies announced Friday.

SeedInvest and Circle said in a blog post that the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), a self-regulatory organization that oversees broker-dealers and securities exchanges in the U.S., granted the crowdfunding startup an ATS license, letting it facilitate secondary trading of private equities – though notably, these equities cannot be tokenized.

In particular, SeedInvest will offer its users the ability to trade equities first launched on the company's primary markets platform, including startup shares after initial investment.

According to a press release, SeedInvest is the first equity crowdfunding platform to receive FINRA approval to operate a secondary trading marketplace.

No tokens (yet)

While SeedInvest can facilitate secondary trading of equity, only the company's existing business – meaning traditional securities – can be traded.

However, a spokesperson for parent firm Circle told CoinDesk that "this is an important step forward towards realizing the vision of tokenized securities."

Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire indicated that the company was looking to tokenize securities when it first made its bid for SeedInvest public last year.

"Crypto securities are going to become a major new category of securities that ultimately every business is going to adopt, just like every business has a website," he said at the time.

The acquisition was finalized in March.

It is unclear when SeedInvest plans to add tokenized securities to the platform.

"Circle's broader mission is to empower people and businesses to more easily share and create value globally," Friday's post said, adding that this means increasing the number of ways startups or individuals can raise funds online.

The post emphasizes that Circle hopes to help accredited and unaccredited investors alike participate in such fundraising projects. Adding a new ATS is part of this mission.

"The past couple of years has witnessed an explosion in experiments in private capital formation and secondary liquidity, with blockchain-powered digital assets becoming a major new category of assets and technology systems for markets," the post said, adding:

"We believe we are in the early stages of a much broader transformation of global capital markets, and that we will see mature, internet-based capital markets emerge that give companies ranging anywhere from the seed to growth stages more ways to raise capital, as well as a much broader base of investors access to invest in those companies."

SeedInvest and Circle will continue to work with regulators to build new products and "innovate the financial system," the post indicated.

Allaire told CoinDesk:

"There's a lot that needs to happen from a regulatory and technical perspective. On the regulatory front, we believe that FINRA still has additional work left to do around areas such as custody, clearance, settlement and record keeping. These are brand new types of investment instruments which require revisiting decade-old policies which weren't constructed with digital assets in mind."

Jeremy Allaire image via CoinDesk archives

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