Tokenization vs traditional fundraising
Tokenizing a raise changes the plumbing — records, settlement, compliance, and transfer — without changing the law it answers to. Here is what moves on-chain, and what doesn't.
| Traditional raise | Tokenized raise | |
|---|---|---|
| Ownership record | Spreadsheets, PDFs, and a registrar's cap table, updated manually. | A live on-chain registry — the token itself is the record, updated in real time. |
| Settlement | Days, through banks and intermediaries. | Near-instant, on-chain, settled in stablecoin (e.g. USDC). |
| Compliance | Checks happen off to the side, per transaction. | Transfer rules are embedded in the token, enforced automatically. |
| Transfer & liquidity | Manual, paperwork-heavy, often locked. | Programmable, compliant transfers — secondary trading where the issuer and regulation allow. |
| Distribution & access | A handful of brokers, limited reach. | Global, digital onboarding — verify once, then participate. |
| Admin & cost | Transfer agents, reconciliation, heavy back-office. | Automated registry; far less manual administration. |
| Transparency | Periodic statements. | Verifiable on-chain, continuously. |
| What stays the same | It is a regulated security. | Still a regulated security — the same laws apply; only the wrapper changes. |
Go deeper:the complete tokenization guide ·how Stobox Raisable works ·security vs utility token ·glossary
Questions, answered
Is tokenization just a faster version of a normal raise?
It changes the infrastructure, not the legality. A tokenized security is still a security, issued under the same exemptions and rules as a traditional offering. What changes is the record, settlement, compliance enforcement, and transferability — they move on-chain.
Does tokenizing an asset make it easier to sell later?
It can. Compliant transfer rules are built into the token, and secondary trading is enabled by the issuer where and when regulation permits. Liquidity is never guaranteed — treat tokenized securities as potentially illiquid.
What does tokenization not change?
The underlying legal obligations. Securities law, investor eligibility, and disclosure requirements still apply. Tokenization is a capital-markets tool, not a way around regulation.
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