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Injective Seeks SEC Transfer Agent Status, Launches RWA Platform

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Injective has taken a significant step toward integrating blockchain technology with traditional financial infrastructure by filing an application with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to register as a transfer agent. The announcement, made during the Injective Summit in Washington, D.C., coincided with the unveiling of Injective Mint, a new institutional platform designed to simplify the issuance and management of tokenized real-world assets (RWAs).

Rather than pursuing a new regulatory framework tailored to cryptocurrencies, Injective is seeking approval to perform one of the financial industry’s most established administrative functions. Transfer agents are responsible for maintaining official ownership records for securities, recording ownership changes, issuing and canceling certificates, and processing dividend distributions. Under SEC regulations, organizations must register before carrying out these functions for qualifying securities.

Injective has filed SEC Form TA-1 to register as a transfer agent, aiming to enable legally recognized securities ownership records to be maintained directly on blockchain infrastructure.

The company indicated that its objective is not to replace existing financial markets but to modernize securities administration by leveraging blockchain technology. Injective believes distributed ledger technology can improve recordkeeping efficiency while creating a more transparent and auditable system for tracking ownership changes.

The filing, however, represents an application for a specific regulated function rather than authorization to operate as a stock exchange, broker, or clearing agency. Under SEC procedures, transfer agent registrations generally become effective approximately 30 days after the appropriate regulator receives a complete application, unless additional review, acceleration, denial, or postponement occurs.

The initiative also reflects the evolution of U.S. securities settlement practices. Since the SEC shortened the standard settlement cycle for most broker-dealer transactions from T+2 to T+1 in May 2024, the discussion has shifted away from dramatically reducing settlement times. Instead, Injective is attempting to demonstrate that blockchain-based ownership records can satisfy regulatory standards while preserving investor protections.


Industry reports indicate that Injective has facilitated billions of dollars in tokenized equity trading volume this year, largely through perpetual products linked to the prices of publicly traded companies rather than direct ownership of corporate shares. This distinction remains important because tokenized price exposure differs fundamentally from maintaining an issuer’s official shareholder registry.

At the time of the announcement, reports also noted that the transfer agent filing was not yet visible in the SEC’s EDGAR database and that Injective had not publicly identified the legal entity submitting the application.

Injective Mint Targets Institutional Tokenization

Alongside its regulatory initiative, Injective introduced Injective Mint, a platform currently available in private beta that enables institutions to create and manage tokenized real-world assets without requiring software development expertise.


Injective Mint enables institutions to issue compliance-ready tokenized assets without coding by integrating asset creation, regulatory controls, and on-chain management into a unified platform.

The platform incorporates compliance features directly into tokenized assets through Injective’s Tokenfactory and Permissions modules. Institutions can establish holder restrictions, define jurisdictional limitations, assign minting and burning authority, freeze compromised assets when necessary, and delegate administrative responsibilities while maintaining overall control.

Unlike conventional tokenization processes that often require customized smart contracts, Injective Mint centralizes asset issuance and compliance management within a single interface. Transactions that violate predefined compliance rules are automatically rejected at the blockchain level, reducing the need for manual oversight or external compliance verification.

Expanding Utility for Tokenized Assets

Beyond asset issuance, Injective designed the platform to integrate newly created tokens into its broader decentralized financial ecosystem. Depending on issuer permissions, tokenized assets can participate in secondary trading, lending protocols, and derivatives markets without requiring separate infrastructure.

The combination of Injective Mint and the company’s transfer agent application positions the platform to offer an integrated framework for regulated tokenized securities, covering issuance, compliance, ownership records, and on-chain financial services.

The launch comes as institutional interest in tokenized assets continues to expand. Major financial firms have accelerated tokenization initiatives while regulators have introduced clearer guidance for digital securities. Injective believes its approach can lower technical and regulatory barriers for banks, fintech companies, and asset managers seeking to tokenize traditional financial assets.

Although the platform remains in private beta, the company plans to broaden support for additional asset classes, issuers, and compliance capabilities as development progresses. Together with its regulatory filing, the initiative reflects Injective’s strategy of positioning blockchain technology within the operational infrastructure of regulated financial markets rather than focusing solely on speculative digital asset trading.

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