ONDO Finance files SEC no-action letter, joins DTCC consortium for tokenized securities

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Ondo Finance just made one of the more consequential regulatory plays in crypto’s push toward traditional finance. The real-world asset tokenization firm submitted a no-action letter to the SEC on April 13, asking the agency to confirm that its Ondo Global Markets product can operate on Ethereum Mainnet without triggering enforcement action.

If the SEC grants the request, it would effectively greenlight a public blockchain as infrastructure for tokenized exposure to over 200 US-listed stocks and ETFs.

What Ondo is actually requesting

A no-action letter is the SEC’s way of saying “we see what you’re doing, and we won’t come after you for it.” It’s not formal approval, but in regulatory terms, it’s the next best thing. Companies use them to get clarity on novel structures that don’t fit neatly into existing rules.

Ondo’s specific request centers on its OGM product, which offers tokenized notes representing exposure to US equities and exchange-traded funds. The key detail: the underlying securities themselves stay within traditional custody frameworks, held by BitGo. The blockchain layer handles the token representation, not the actual asset custody.

The filing follows the SEC’s closure of a multi-year investigation into Ondo that ended without any charges. That clean bill of health likely gave the company confidence to push for explicit regulatory comfort rather than operating in ambiguity.

The DTCC connection and broker-dealer acquisition

The company has joined a DTCC consortium and plans to commence production trades within it by July 2026. Ondo’s approach mirrors prior no-action relief the SEC granted to the DTCC itself for tokenized securities. The company is essentially arguing that its model is complementary to what DTCC is already doing, not competitive with it.

Ondo has also acquired a US broker-dealer. Owning a broker-dealer gives the firm a regulated entity through which it can facilitate securities transactions, handle compliance obligations, and interact with counterparties who require dealing with a licensed intermediary.

The numbers behind Ondo’s growth

Ondo’s platform currently holds $3.55B in total value locked. The company is distributing $67 million in annualized yield to token holders. On the day of the filing, the ONDO token rose approximately 3% to $0.2519.

What this means for investors

The no-action letter is a bellwether for the entire tokenized securities market. If the SEC grants it, every other tokenization platform will have a template to follow. If the agency denies it or stays silent, it signals that public blockchains remain in regulatory limbo for securities applications, regardless of how carefully a product is structured.

For ONDO token holders specifically, the July production trade timeline within the DTCC consortium is the next major milestone to watch. The broker-dealer acquisition also changes Ondo’s competitive positioning. Most tokenization platforms rely on third-party broker-dealers or operate outside the US entirely to avoid regulatory complexity. Owning the brokerage license in-house removes a dependency.

The risk here is straightforward: the SEC has no obligation to respond to no-action requests on any particular timeline, or at all. And even with a favorable response, the scope of relief might be narrower than what Ondo is seeking, potentially limiting OGM’s product offerings or requiring additional restrictions.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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