Why Is Kraken Accepting Tokenized Stocks as Collateral?
Kraken has begun accepting select tokenized stocks and exchange-traded funds as collateral for futures and margin trading, expanding the role of tokenized real-world assets beyond simple spot exposure.
The feature allows eligible clients to use supported tokenized securities as collateral without selling them first. That means users can keep exposure to assets such as Apple, Nvidia, Tesla, Strategy, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF, and the Invesco QQQ Trust while opening leveraged positions on the exchange.
The launch reflects a broader shift in tokenized markets. Tokenized stocks and ETFs are no longer being pitched only as blockchain versions of traditional assets. Exchanges and infrastructure providers are trying to turn them into usable financial instruments for collateral, margin, settlement, and lending activity.
For Kraken, the move strengthens its futures and margin offering outside the United States while deepening the connection between crypto trading and tokenized traditional assets. For users, the main appeal is capital efficiency. Holdings that would otherwise sit idle can now support trading activity, subject to risk limits.
How Will Kraken Manage Collateral Risk?
Kraken is applying collateral haircuts to each supported tokenized asset, reducing the amount of borrowing value users receive against their holdings. The haircut depends on the perceived risk of the asset.
Broad-market ETFs receive the lowest haircut at 10%, reflecting their diversified exposure and lower relative volatility compared with single stocks. More volatile assets, including Strategy and Robinhood, carry a 30% haircut. That means a user posting those assets receives materially less collateral value than the market value of the tokenized holding.
The exchange has also set collateral limits by asset. Broad-market ETFs can be used for up to $1 million in collateral value, most individual stocks are capped at $250,000, and tokenized gold and Circle shares are capped at $100,000.
Kraken said the haircuts and limits will be reviewed periodically and remain subject to change. That flexibility is important because tokenized equities can carry both market risk and liquidity risk. If prices move sharply, or if the underlying tokenized market becomes harder to trade, collateral values may need to be adjusted quickly.
Investor Takeaway
Kraken’s rollout shows tokenized stocks moving from access products into trading infrastructure. The key question is not only whether users want tokenized equity exposure, but whether exchanges can manage those assets safely as collateral during volatile markets.
Who Can Use the New Feature?
The feature is available only to eligible clients outside the United States. Kraken said tokenized stocks can be used as collateral for futures trading in the European Economic Area, while margin collateral support is available in other eligible jurisdictions outside the bloc.
The geographic limits show that tokenized securities remain a regulated product category with uneven market access. Even as crypto exchanges expand tokenized stock offerings, availability still depends on local rules covering securities, derivatives, margin trading, and investor eligibility.
That creates a split market. Non-U.S. clients may gain earlier access to tokenized securities as collateral, while U.S. users remain outside the feature for now. For exchanges, this makes international expansion central to testing tokenized asset utility before broader regulatory paths become clearer.
The launch also follows Kraken’s recent partnership with Maple to create an onchain warehouse financing facility for institutional crypto lending. Together, the moves point to a wider strategy: using tokenized and blockchain-based credit infrastructure to expand lending, margin, and institutional trading products.
Why Are Tokenized Real-World Assets Gaining Utility?
Kraken’s move fits into a larger push to make tokenized real-world assets usable across financial markets. Recent product launches have focused less on tokenization as a standalone concept and more on practical use cases such as collateral, settlement, and structured credit.
Franklin Templeton and Binance launched a program in February allowing institutions to use tokenized money market fund shares as trading collateral while the underlying assets remained in regulated off-exchange custody. BlackRock’s tokenized U.S. Treasury fund, BUIDL, is also accepted as trading collateral on Binance, Crypto.com, and Deribit.
Earlier this week, Tradeweb executed what it described as the first real-time purchase and sale of a tokenized U.S. Treasury settled against tokenized cash on the Canton Network. That transaction points to another area of development: settlement systems that use tokenized cash and tokenized securities in the same workflow.
The market is still small compared with traditional securities markets, but growth has accelerated. Tokenized real-world assets have reached about $32.6 billion in distributed value, while tokenized stocks have climbed to roughly $2 billion from about $381 million a year earlier, according to RWA.xyz.
For institutional adoption, the next stage depends on whether tokenized assets can prove useful under stress. Collateral products must handle volatility, liquidations, custody questions, and regulatory review. Kraken’s rollout adds another test case for whether tokenized stocks can become more than tradable wrappers and take a larger role in crypto market structure.