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Policy

Securitize SPAC Deal Moves Ahead After SEC Clears S-4 Filing

Why Does the SEC Clearance Matter? Securitize has moved closer to becoming a public company after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission declared its S-4 Registration Statement effective

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 5, 2026
5 min read
NEWS
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Securitize

Why Does the SEC Clearance Matter?

Securitize has moved closer to becoming a public company after the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission declared its S-4 Registration Statement effective, clearing the next step in its proposed merger with Cantor Equity Partners II. The decision allows the deal to move to a shareholder vote on June 29. If shareholders approve the transaction and other customary closing conditions are met, the merger is expected to close shortly after the special shareholder meeting. The combined company will be named Securitize Corp. and is expected to list on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker SECZ. That would make Securitize one of the most visible public-market plays tied directly to tokenization, a sector that has moved from crypto-native infrastructure into a growing part of institutional finance. The listing route also matters. Securitize is not pursuing a traditional IPO. It is going public through Cantor Equity Partners II, a publicly traded special purpose acquisition company sponsored by an affiliate of Cantor Fitzgerald. The SPAC structure gives Securitize a faster public-market path, but it also places the company under investor scrutiny at a time when tokenized assets are attracting larger financial institutions.

What Is Securitize Bringing to Public Markets?

Securitize is a major infrastructure provider for tokenized securities and fund administration. The firm says it has more than $4 billion in tokenized assets and works with financial firms including BlackRock, Apollo, KKR, Hamilton Lane, and VanEck. The company also services roughly 650 funds through Securitize Fund Services. That makes its business more than a token issuance platform. It sits across fund servicing, compliance infrastructure, investor onboarding, and blockchain-based distribution for regulated assets. Securitize reported $1.9 billion in transaction volume in the first quarter of the year. That figure gives public-market investors a clearer operating metric to track as tokenization moves beyond pilot projects and into products tied to funds, private credit, money market exposure, equities, and alternative assets. The company’s profile has been helped by institutional partnerships. Securitize raised $47 million in a 2024 strategic funding round led by BlackRock. More recently, it announced partnerships with the New York Stock Exchange to build a tokenized equities trading platform and with Computershare on issuer-sponsored tokenized shares.

Investor Takeaway

Securitize’s public listing would give investors direct exposure to tokenization infrastructure rather than a single tokenized asset. The opportunity is tied to whether regulated financial assets can move onchain at scale, not simply whether crypto market prices rise.

Why Is Tokenization Becoming A Public-Market Theme?

Tokenization has become one of the clearest areas where blockchain infrastructure overlaps with traditional finance. The model allows real-world assets such as funds, credit products, equities, and cash-like instruments to be issued, transferred, or serviced using blockchain rails while remaining inside a regulated structure. For large asset managers, the attraction is not only secondary trading. Tokenized products can also reduce settlement friction, automate parts of investor servicing, support fractional ownership, and improve distribution to eligible investors across platforms. Those benefits are still developing, but major financial institutions are now treating tokenization as a market-structure project rather than a crypto experiment. Securitize CEO Carlos Domingo framed the SEC clearance as part of that shift. “This marks another important milestone for Securitize and for the broader institutional adoption of tokenization,” Domingo said. “Becoming a public company would position Securitize to continue scaling that infrastructure globally as tokenization increasingly becomes part of mainstream financial markets.” The public-company structure could help Securitize in 2 ways. It may increase transparency for partners that need regulated, audited, and publicly visible counterparties. It may also give the company access to capital markets as competition increases among banks, exchanges, custodians, transfer agents, and blockchain infrastructure firms.

What Are the Risks Around the SPAC Deal?

The merger still requires shareholder approval and must meet customary closing conditions. Until those steps are completed, Securitize’s listing is not final. The SPAC route also brings execution risk. Public investors will need to assess whether Securitize can convert institutional interest in tokenization into durable revenue growth. The company’s partnerships with major financial firms support the market case, but the sector remains early, and adoption timelines can be slow when regulated securities, transfer agency rules, custody controls, and market infrastructure are involved. There is also competitive pressure. Tokenization is drawing interest from exchanges, fund administrators, banks, fintech firms, and blockchain networks. Securitize’s advantage is its established regulated infrastructure and partner base, but maintaining that edge will depend on product depth, compliance execution, and whether tokenized markets develop enough liquidity to support broader use. Cantor Equity Partners II’s sponsorship adds another layer of market attention. The SPAC is sponsored by an affiliate of Cantor Fitzgerald, a financial services firm with ties to U.S. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick. That connection may draw public interest, though the immediate market question is whether shareholders approve the merger and how investors value Securitize once it trades as SECZ. If completed, the transaction would place Securitize in the public markets at a time when tokenization is gaining institutional backing but still needs clearer proof of scale. The listing would not settle that question, but it would give investors a new way to measure it.