In brief

  • The launch embeds tokenized equities inside a consumer messaging app with hundreds of millions of users, rather than limiting access to crypto exchanges.
  • The tokens are fully collateralized and designed to trade on-chain while tracking the price of the underlying shares and ETFs.
  • Availability excludes the U.S. and depends on local securities rules, underscoring the regulatory limits on broader rollout.

Kraken-backed xStocks have launched on the TON blockchain, making tokenized versions of U.S. stocks and ETFs readily available inside the Telegram app through its built-in TON Wallet.

The integration allows users to buy, hold, and transfer tokenized representations of equities such as Tesla, Nvidia, and the S&P 500 ETF without leaving the messaging app.

“Embedding tokenized U.S. stocks into Telegram Wallet is a massive UX unlock,” Dan Dadybayo, research and strategy lead at Unstoppable Wallet, told Decrypt. With it, “stocks start to feel like a native internet object, not a brokerage product,” he added.

“For many users, especially outside the U.S. or EU, this is the first time equities are one tap away: no broker account, no complex onboarding, fractional by default,” he noted.

“That said, there’s a key friction point people underestimate: these assets still trade 24/5, not true 24/7.” Even though the tokenized assets “live on-chain and can technically move anytime,” pricing, corporate actions, and redemptions “remain anchored to U.S. market hours,” Dadybayo said. “For a crypto-native audience used to always-on DeFi, weekends are effectively dead time, which breaks the mental model of seamless on-chain finance,” he opined. “In practice, this blends TradFi constraints with crypto UX,” one that is “powerful, but not fully native yet.”

The launch marks one of the clearest attempts yet to bring tokenized financial products to mass-market distribution channels, rather than keeping them confined to crypto-native wallets and exchanges.

The aim is to bring “tokenized equities onto truly open infrastructure,” Kraken co-CEO Arjun Sethi said in a statement.

Sethi believes that what counts is “the real promise of tokenization,” one that could become “neutral, composable building blocks that anyone can use.”

Telegram claims to have more than 900 million users globally, while TON Wallet reports nearly 100 million users, according to project figures.

xStocks, meanwhile, offers a fully collateralized, one-to-one backed product, backed by underlying equities and ETFs held through regulated partners. The tokens are designed to trade on-chain while tracking the price of the underlying assets, offering exposure without direct ownership of the shares.

However, the service is not available to U.S. users and is limited to jurisdictions where the tokens can be legally offered, given how xStocks has not registered under the U.S. Securities Act of 1933.

That legal structure relies on careful jurisdictional controls, which could limit how broadly the distribution model can expand, particularly as regulators scrutinize tokenized representations of traditional assets more closely.

Tokenized equities have existed for years, but adoption has remained limited. Earlier efforts often struggled with liquidity, regulatory uncertainty, and narrow user bases concentrated on crypto trading platforms.

By embedding tokenized assets within a consumer messaging app with a broad user base, Kraken and its partners appear to be testing whether distribution could have been the missing ingredient for scaling.

For Kraken, the TON rollout fits into a wider strategy. The exchange recently announced plans to acquire Backed Finance to consolidate issuance, trading, and settlement of xStocks. Support for additional blockchains is already underway, including Mantle and TRON.

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Author: Vince Dioquino

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