The 42-page filing outlines a legal infrastructure that would allow digital tokens representing traditional financial instruments, such as equities, bonds, and real estate, to be treated as equivalent to the underlying assets.
By contrast, the company is advocating for a unified national framework that would enable broker-dealers to issue and trade tokenized securities under a standardized compliance model, removing the need for parallel systems.
According to the report, the initiative includes plans for a new platform called the Real World Asset Exchange (RRE), which would feature off-chain trade matching paired with on-chain settlement.
If adopted, the framework could eliminate legal ambiguities surrounding asset ownership and reduce settlement times, while preserving investor protections under existing securities law.
Its filing argues that tokenized assets should not be classified as derivatives or synthetic instruments but recognized as direct representations of traditional financial products.
The report noted that the company is not proposing new blockchain technology, but rather legal interoperability to anchor tokenized finance to existing compliance standards.
While the SEC has not yet responded to the proposal, Robinhood’s filing may serve as a test case for how regulators view asset-token equivalence. The success of the initiative will likely depend not only on regulatory reception but also on the ability to attract institutional participation and demonstrate utility at scale.
As of now, Robinhood’s submission represents one of the most structured efforts by a US-regulated broker to formalize the role of tokenized RWAs within mainstream finance.