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

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Ondo Finance just asked the SEC for permission, not forgiveness. The real-world asset tokenization firm submitted a no-action letter on April 13, requesting regulatory clarity to use Ethereum Mainnet for managing tokenized securities tied to its Ondo Global Markets product.

The filing covers tokenized notes linked to more than 200 US stocks and ETFs, targeting non-US investors. If the SEC grants the relief, it would mark one of the most significant regulatory green lights for on-chain securities infrastructure to date.

What the no-action letter actually means

A no-action letter is the SEC’s way of saying “we won’t sue you if you do this specific thing.” It’s not approval. It’s not endorsement.

Ondo’s request specifically leverages prior SEC no-action relief granted to the DTCC’s tokenization model. Ondo wants to run tokenized versions of traditional securities on Ethereum while maintaining custody through established players like BitGo and broker-dealers such as Alpaca.

This isn’t Ondo’s first dance with the SEC. The agency conducted an investigation into the firm that concluded in late 2025 without any charges being filed.

The DTCC connection and July timeline

Ondo is preparing to launch production trades within the DTCC consortium in July 2026.

Alongside the regulatory push, Ondo is distributing $67 million in annualized yield to holders of its tokenized products.

The firm also recently acquired a US broker-dealer, a move designed to bring compliance capabilities in-house rather than relying entirely on third-party partners.

The broader RWA tokenization landscape

Ondo’s Ondo Global Markets product covers tokenized notes linked to over 200 stocks and ETFs, representing one of the broadest product offerings in the RWA space. Most tokenization efforts have focused on treasuries and government bonds. Expanding into individual equities and ETFs is a meaningfully more complex undertaking from both a regulatory and operational standpoint.

The ONDO token responded to the filing with a 2-3% price increase. The real catalyst will be whether the SEC actually grants the no-action relief and whether those July production trades go live as planned.

What this means for investors

For ONDO token holders, the $67 million in annualized yield distribution demonstrates that the underlying business generates actual revenue.

A no-action letter request can be denied, ignored, or modified with conditions that change the economics. The SEC has no obligation to respond on any timeline. Ondo’s entire product architecture for non-US investors depends on this regulatory clarity.

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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