The RWA & tokenization glossary
33 plain-language definitions — from what an RWA is, to the exact regulations and standards a compliant raise runs on. Written by an operator that has tokenized $300M+ in assets since 2018.
Prefer a side-by-side? Comparesecurity vs utility tokens,tokenization vs traditional fundraising, and theReg D / S / CF / A+ exemptions.
Core concepts
- Real-world asset (RWA)
- A tangible or traditional financial asset — real estate, a fund, private equity, commodities, royalties — that exists off-chain and can be represented on a blockchain.
- Asset tokenization
- Issuing a blockchain token that represents legal ownership of, or a claim on, a real asset. The token becomes the official, transferable record of ownership.
- Tokenized security
- A security (equity, debt, fund interest) issued and recorded as a compliant on-chain token, with transfer rules enforced by the token itself.
- Security token
- A token that is a regulated security — it confers ownership, profit, or repayment rights and is subject to securities law. Distinct from a utility token.
- Utility token
- A token used to access a product or service, conferring no equity, profit-share, or voting rights. A consumer good, not a security.
- Asset Passport
- Stobox's on-chain identity for a tokenized asset — a verifiable record of its legal, compliance, and ownership data that follows the token.
- On-chain registry
- The blockchain-based cap table that records who owns a tokenized security in real time, replacing spreadsheets and manual transfer agents.
- Non-custodial
- A model where the user holds their own keys and assets. Stobox is non-custodial — it never takes custody of investor funds or tokens.
- Self-custody wallet
- A wallet the owner controls directly. On Stobox it signs you in, anchors one-time verification, and holds the securities you buy.
- Primary issuance
- The first sale of a tokenized security by its issuer to investors — the capital-raising event, as opposed to later secondary trading.
- Secondary trading
- Buying and selling a security after issuance. For tokenized securities it is enabled by the issuer where and when regulation permits, with transfer rules built into the token.
Regulatory frameworks
- Reg D (Rule 506(c))
- A U.S. exemption for private placements to accredited investors, allowing general solicitation when all investors are verified as accredited.
- Reg S
- A U.S. exemption for securities offered to investors outside the United States, commonly paired with Reg D for global raises.
- Reg CF
- U.S. Regulation Crowdfunding — lets companies raise from the general public (accredited and non-accredited) up to an annual cap, via a registered portal.
- Reg A+
- A U.S. exemption (a 'mini-IPO') allowing public raises up to a set ceiling from all investors, with SEC qualification and ongoing reporting.
- EU Prospectus Regulation
- The EU framework governing when a published prospectus is required to offer securities to the public across member states.
- Accredited investor
- An investor meeting income or net-worth thresholds who is permitted to participate in certain private (e.g. Reg D) offerings.
- KYC / KYB
- Know Your Customer / Know Your Business — the identity verification of investors and entities required before participating in a regulated offering.
- Broker-dealer
- A licensed firm that transacts securities. Public raises are run through broker-dealers; Stobox is a technology provider, not a broker-dealer.
- Transfer agent
- The party that maintains a security's ownership records. For tokenized securities, an on-chain registry performs this function automatically.
Standards, chains & rails
- ERC-20
- The baseline Ethereum standard for fungible tokens. Compliant securities extend it with permissioning and transfer restrictions.
- Permissioned token standards
- Standards such as ERC-3643 and emerging ERC-7943 that add identity and compliance rules to tokens so only eligible holders can transfer them.
- Base
- The USDC-native Ethereum Layer-2 in the Coinbase stack. Stobox Compass issues on Base for compliant, low-cost, scalable settlement.
- Arbitrum
- An Ethereum Layer-2 network. The STBX security token is issued on Arbitrum.
- USDC
- A fully-reserved, dollar-backed stablecoin used to settle investments in tokenized assets on Stobox.
- Smart wallet
- A self-custody wallet (e.g. Coinbase Smart Wallet) with no seed phrase to record, used to sign in and hold assets on Stobox.
The Stobox stack
- Stobox Intelligence
- The 'Organize' layer — turns a company into one canonical, verifiable record scored across the 7 AXIS readiness pillars.
- Stobox Raisable
- The 'Raise' layer — turns that record into a broker-acceptance-grade regulated offering, for a flat fee, never a percentage of the raise.
- Stobox Compass
- The 'Tokenize' layer — issues a live, compliant tokenized security with an on-chain registry and Asset Passport, non-custodial, on Base.
- AXIS readiness pillars
- The seven dimensions (asset, legal, market, operations and related) Stobox uses to score how prepared a company is to raise or tokenize.
- Readiness Score
- A free 25-question assessment scoring an asset across legal, market, asset, and operations — the same methodology used inside Stobox Compass.
- STBU
- The Stobox ecosystem's utility token — access, payments, and staking across Compass, consolidated 1:1 onto Base.
- STBX
- Stobox's regulated security token representing equity in Stobox, on Arbitrum, offered to eligible investors under Reg D 506(c) / Reg S / EU Prospectus.
See where your asset stands.
Turn these terms into a plan. Score your asset free across the same pillars Stobox uses to take companies from organized to on-chain.
Get your free Readiness Score