Injective seeks SEC transfer agent status to put records onchain

Injective says it has filed for transfer agent registration with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, seeking a regulated route to maintain ownership records for tokenized securities on blockchain infrastructure.
Summary
- Injective says its SEC filing could move tokenized securities ownership records directly onto blockchain infrastructure.
- The proposed transfer agent role would connect legal shareholder records with sub-second blockchain settlement systems.
- No public SEC filing was located, leaving the registration claim independently unverified at publication time.
The blockchain project announced the filing on X on July 16. The move could place Injective closer to the regulated systems that determine legal securities ownership.
However, Injective did not name the legal entity that submitted the application, and a public filing matching the announcement was not located in SEC materials reviewed at publication time.
Injective targets a regulated securities record system
Transfer agents perform a core role in U.S. securities markets. They record ownership changes, maintain security holder records, and handle other administrative functions for issuers. The SEC says a transfer agent must register with the appropriate regulator before performing transfer agent functions for qualifying securities.
Injective said its proposed system would move these records onto blockchain infrastructure.
“Tokenized securities and RWAs need compliant ownership records on infrastructure that settles in less than a second,” the project said.
Still, filing for registration does not mean that the SEC has approved the application.
Tokenization moves beyond issuing digital assets
The filing comes as blockchain firms and traditional financial companies move beyond simply issuing tokenized assets. Market infrastructure providers are now testing blockchain for trading data, settlement, collateral management, and securities administration.
As crypto.news previously reported, Nasdaq began distributing its TotalView order book data through Pyth Network in June. The arrangement gives blockchain applications access to institutional market data and forms part of Nasdaq’s broader work around tokenized markets.
Wall Street infrastructure continues moving onchain
Meanwhile, the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation is developing blockchain-based infrastructure for post-trade markets. DTCC is working with Chainlink on a Collateral AppChain designed to support around-the-clock collateral pricing, valuation, margining, and settlement. The platform targets a Q4 2026 production launch.
Tokenized stock markets are also expanding. As previously reported, the New York Stock Exchange has partnered with Securitize on infrastructure for tokenized stocks and exchange-traded funds, while Nasdaq has pursued its own regulated tokenization initiatives.
Injective expands its focus on real-world assets
Injective has already positioned its network around decentralized finance and tokenized real-world assets. In 2025, the project partnered with Republic to expand access to tokenized private-market investments through its blockchain infrastructure.
The transfer agent application would take that strategy into another part of regulated market infrastructure if approved. Rather than only providing technology for issuing or trading tokenized assets, Injective would seek a role in maintaining the official records that show who owns securities.









