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Robinhood's Tokenized Stocks Are Not Stocks

Plus, we dive into the emerging crypto bank charter race.

Hello, Real World!

I’m Chris (@storaker) and this The Defiant’s weekly deep‑dive into the ideas, products, and regulations that are pushing trillions of dollars on‑chain.

The past seven days have been a masterclass in wrapping the old with the new. Robinhood announced 24‑hour on-chain access to popular U.S. equities—then quietly conceded the “shares” are derivatives, while Circle and Ripple both asked Washington for the keys to a bank charter.

Let’s get real.

— Chris

Top Moves This Week

Tokenized-stocks push: Robinhood opened 24/5 trading on 200+ tokenized U.S. stocks and ETFs for European users—minted on Arbitrum for now and slated to migrate to its own permissionless L2—with plans to scale to 2,000 tickers by 2025 ; meanwhile Kraken and Bybit simultaneously listed roughly 60 blue-chip “xStocks” (Apple, Nvidia, SPY and more) on Solana (and on BNB Chain in coming weeks) via Backed Finance, giving non-U.S. clients self-custody withdrawals and the option to deploy the tokens across DeFi pools like Raydium and Jupiter.

Bank license land-grab: Circle has applied for an OCC national trust bank so it can park USDC reserves directly at the Fed, while Ripple went a step further—filing for a full national bank charter that could hand it a coveted master account

The Allure and Illusion of Tokenized Stocks

Robinhood’s splashy Cannes announcement promised more than 200 U.S. equities tradable around the clock, dividend payouts on‑chain, and DeFi‑ready collateral.

Yet under the hood, today’s “stock tokens” look less like the direct‑registration dream and more like the CFDs of old, dressed in ERC‑20 hoodies. A BaFin‑regulated special‑purpose vehicle holds the real shares (or an index‑tracking ETF) and issues an on‑chain IOU. Holders enjoy price exposure, but no voting rights, no shareholder lawsuits, and no seniority if the SPV goes bust.

That nuance mattered the moment Robinhood announced trading of OpenAI, a private company, stock. The AI firm quickly cried out it had “never authorized” any share token. Lithuanian regulators opened an inquiry within hours, and Vlad Tenev, Robinhood’s CEO had to respond with a statement: “At our recent crypto event, we announced a limited Stock Token giveaway on OpenAI and SpaceX to eligible European customers. While it’s true they aren’t technically ‘equity,’ the tokens effectively give retail investors exposure to these private assets”.

The episode underscored a thorny truth: programmable exposure is easy; programmable ownership is still a legal and infrastructural nightmare, and exposes a growing tension around RWAs do we bridge real assets and cap tables into smart contracts, or do we settle for wrapped exposure routed through another intermediary? Robinhood’s launch bends toward the latter. It will unlock access, especially for non‑U.S. users barred from Wall Street’s day session, but it also re‑introduces the very counter‑party risks DeFi claimed to obliterate.

Still, the advance is not trivial. Instant‑settling equity exposure that can be plunked into a borrowing vault five seconds later is a UX leap over any traditional broker. Robinhood’s bet is that convenience outweighs purist concerns—for now.

The Bank‑Charter Arms Race

Bank charters come in flavors, and right now crypto companies are sampling the entire menu. Last week Circle sought an OCC national trust bank license—think of it as a narrow‑purpose bank that can custody assets, clear payments, and maybe, just maybe, park reserves directly at a Federal Reserve account. Two days later Ripple one‑upped them, applying for a full national bank charter that would include deposit‑taking and, crucially, a shot at a Fed master account.

Why the sudden scramble? Three incentives line up almost perfectly:

I. Cheaper settlement. Holding reserves at the Fed eliminates intermediary banks, trims wire fees, and shortens reconciliation cycles. For Circle’s $57 billion float, shaving even 10 basis points off money‑movement costs is real money.

II. Regulatory halo. A bank charter positions an issuer inside the perimeter regulators already trust. With the GENIUS Act inching toward a Senate vote—and language that would require national charters for U.S. dollar stablecoins—the proactive move buys time and credibility.

Anchorage Digital—famously the first crypto firm to secure an OCC national trust bank charter back in January 2021—has since parlayed that regulatory cachet into a role as referee, publishing “Stablecoin Risk Ratings” that recently dinged USDC for limited third-party oversight and concentration risk. Circle’s push for its own trust-bank license can be read as a direct response to that critique: by parking reserves at the Fed and submitting to on-site OCC examinations, it aims to close the governance gap Anchorage flagged. Ripple’s gambit is even bolder—leaping straight from cross-border payment network to full national bank will test how elastic the charter system really is, especially now that the OCC has grown more skeptical since Anchorage’s trail-blazing approval.

III. Strategic moat. Access to the Fed’s balance‑sheet is a club with extremely high switching costs. If Circle or Ripple secures a master account first, competitors may find themselves stuck routing through chartered rivals or paying correspondent fees that erode yield.

A challenge to fractional-reserve banking? A January 2022 Fed discussion paper drives home why Circle and Ripple are sprinting for national charters.  Researchers Gordon Liao and John Caramichael argue that stablecoins backed by segregated Fed reserves—a “narrow-bank” model—offer the cleanest peg but risk draining deposits from commercial banks and forcing the Fed to expand its balance sheet to meet reserve demand.

Our call? Expect a multi‑year slog—but also expect every major U.S. stable‑issuer to file sooner rather than later. The writing is on the wall, and it reads: “to stay relevant, bring a routing number.”

CEO Vlad Tenev announced Robinhood’s own L2 built on Arbitrum and called it “the first chain built from day one for real‑world assets,” and he’s genuinely excited about cutting settlement from two days to a few seconds.

“We couldn’t achieve that speed by waiting for legacy market plumbing to change.”

Vlad Tenev, CEO Robinhood on interview with The Defiant

Walled-garden: While Robinhood’s new L2 sits on open-source Arbitrum code, access to the stock tokens is anything but permissionless: you can only mint, trade, or redeem inside Robinhood’s fenced-off app (or approved front-ends), and the bridge contracts are controlled by a company multisig that can pause transfers at will. There’s no trustless path to withdraw to a self-custody wallet, nor to list them on external DEXs—at least for now. The team says it “may explore permissionless withdrawal once regulators are comfortable”.

Centrifuge × S&P DJI — The first tokenized S&P 500 index fund is live; traders swapped $30 M in its first 72 hours, setting a benchmark for programmable blue-chip exposure. 

BIS to stablecoins: “Make way for CBDCs” At the ECB’s Sintra retreat, the central-bank umbrella body said only public money can guarantee “singleness” and systemic integrity, teeing up policy headwinds for private coins. 

GENIUS Act countdown. After a 68-30 Senate passage, the landmark stablecoin bill heads to the House for a July 15 vote; the current text would force U.S. issuers to secure OCC charters and hold cash-or-T-bill reserves 1:1. 

Tips, corrections, rants? Let me know (@storaker), or contact the editors at [email protected].

See you next week—until then, stay real!