---
title: "Ondo Finance Tokenizes BlackRock ETF, Micron Shares"
date: 2026-07-03
author: "Kathleen Kinder"
featured_image: "https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/ondo-finance-tokenizes-blackrock-etf-micron-shares.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Cryptocurrency"
    url: "/crypto.md"
tags:
  - name: "News"
    url: "/tag/news.md"
---

# Ondo Finance Tokenizes BlackRock ETF, Micron Shares

Ondo Finance launched tokenized shares of BlackRock’s iShares Core S&amp;P 500 ETF and Micron Technology stock on Ethereum on July 2, 2026, the first third-party tokenization of U.S. listed securities built inside existing U.S. custody rules.

## Key Takeaways

- Ondo Finance put tokenized shares of BlackRock’s IVV ETF and Micron Technology (MU) on the Ethereum blockchain on July 2, 2026.
- The underlying shares stay in the traditional U.S. regulated custody chain rather than moving onto the blockchain.
- Ondo’s SEC-registered transfer agent, Oasis Pro TA, LLC, mints the tokens on a 1:1 basis against those shares.
- The launch follows the SEC’s January 28, 2026 Statement on Tokenized Securities, which said format does not change how securities law applies.
- Broadridge already gives holders of more than 250 Ondo tokenized stocks and ETFs access to proxy voting and governance filings.

## What Happened?

Ondo Finance, a tokenization platform, launched tokenized shares of **BlackRock’s iShares Core S&amp;P 500 ETF (IVV)** and **Micron Technology (MU)** on [Ethereum](https://coinlaw.io/ethereum-statistics/). Custodial design is the detail that separates this launch from prior tokenized-stock products: the company calls it the first time a third party has tokenized U.S.-listed securities while operating within existing U.S. regulatory and market infrastructure.

> As America turns 250, U.S. securities have come onchain on U.S. rails.  
>   
> Today, Ondo Finance announced the first-ever live solution of third-party tokenized U.S. securities operating entirely within the existing regulatory perimeter in the U.S., in partnership with [@Broadridge](https://x.com/Broadridge?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)… [pic.twitter.com/auHGrXFtrv](https://t.co/auHGrXFtrv)
> 
> — Ondo Finance (@OndoFinance) [July 2, 2026](https://x.com/OndoFinance/status/2072663880786976799?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw)

 The structure matters more than the ticker list. The underlying shares never leave the traditional U.S. regulated custody chain. Oasis Pro TA, LLC, an SEC-registered transfer agent and a subsidiary of Ondo Finance, mints the tokens on a **1:1** basis against those shares. CEO **Ian De Bode** framed the launch as a foundation, not a finished retail product:

“**Ondo has built the regulatory, product, and service infrastructure to support all major models.**” De Bode said the deployment “**provides a strong foundation for our expanding access to onchain investments for more U.S. investors”**, language describing a foundation being built, not a claim that U.S. retail trading is live today.

The launch traces to the SEC’s [Statement on Tokenized Securities](https://www.sec.gov/newsroom/speeches-statements/corp-fin-statement-tokenized-securities-012826-statement-tokenized-securities). The Divisions of Corporation Finance, Investment Management, and Trading and Markets issued the statement, splitting tokenized securities into two categories: those tokenized by the issuer, and those tokenized by unaffiliated third parties. Ondo’s launch falls in the second bucket, where the statement is explicit: “**the underlying security is held in custody, and the crypto asset evidences the holder’s ownership interest… in the underlying security being held in custody**“.

## Why the Custody Model Is the Compliance Crux?

The statement says the format a security is issued in “**does not affect application of the federal securities laws,**” and every offer and sale still requires registration or an exemption. Earlier tokenized-stock products often issued **synthetic** tokens tracking a share’s price with no registered custodian holding the real security behind them, a gap the statement closes on paper. A synthetic wrapper with no custody chain does not escape the registration requirement; a token backed 1:1 by a share sitting with a registered transfer agent does.

That distinction is why the structure, not the tokenization itself, is the news here. Oasis Pro TA is a registered transfer agent minting tokens **1:1** against shares held in custody, a registered intermediary recording ownership, rather than a synthetic derivative layered on top.

## Broadridge Closes the Governance Gap

Synthetic tokenized-equity products have historically stripped out shareholder rights along with custody. Broadridge and Ondo announced a partnership in April 2026 letting holders of Ondo’s tokenized stocks and ETFs vote by proxy through Broadridge’s ProxyVote.com platform, the same infrastructure traditional brokerages use. That integration already covers more than **250** tokenized stocks and ETFs, giving holders access to voting, prospectuses, and regulatory filings, not just price exposure.

**Doug DeSchutter**, Broadridge’s President of Investor Communication Solutions, tied the governance layer to adoption:

“

Tokenization will only scale when it delivers both innovation and investor confidence.

Doug DeSchutterPresident of Investor Communication Solutions – BroadRidge





## Implications for Tokenized Securities

The custody-anchored model lands alongside a broader SEC posture favoring designs that preserve existing investor protections over ones that bypass them. The statement says securities-law obligations, including registration, apply “**regardless of**” whether the format is onchain or offchain, unless an exemption from registration is available. That favors platforms routing through registered transfer agents over ones offering price-tracking tokens with no custody chain.

The Broadridge integration is the more durable signal for [institutional adoption](https://coinlaw.io/cryptocurrency-adoption-by-institutional-investors-statistics/). Voting rights and filing access are the features large asset managers have flagged as missing from earlier tokenized-equity pilots. A token carrying the same governance rights as the underlying share removes one standing objection to treating tokenized shares as functionally equivalent to the security itself.

## CoinLaw’s Takeaway

This launch reads as a bet on compliance as the product, not a workaround. Ondo mints tokens against shares sitting in registered custody rather than a synthetic wrapper, and that choice is what the SEC statement rewards. Pairing a [BlackRock](https://coinlaw.io/blackrock-statistics/) ETF with a semiconductor stock looks less like a retail pitch and more like a proof point for custodians and institutions watching whether a third-party model satisfies existing securities law without new rulemaking.

The open question is distribution, not legality. Ondo’s own language describes “**expanding access,**” not confirming U.S. retail can trade these tokens at launch, a gap worth watching against existing [retail investing data](https://coinlaw.io/retail-investing-statistics/) as adoption is measured.

The Broadridge voting layer strengthens the case that tokenized shares can be treated as equivalent to traditional ones, but structural equivalence does not guarantee who can actually buy the tokens yet. That gap, between legally sound and broadly available, is worth tracking as Ondo and its transfer agent report real investor access in coming months.