Injective, a blockchain network, has formally registered its transfer agent with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), becoming one of the networks chasing a compliant framework for the on-chain issuance and management of securities directly on-chain.
The announcement occurred at the network’s Injective Summit, where the team confirmed plans to move the record of ownership for real-world assets and tokenized securities from traditional off-chain systems onto the blockchain rails.
Injective has filed its transfer agent registration with the SEC, marking a major step towards becoming a leading blockchain with a regulated pathway to issue securities onchain.
This advances RWA market infrastructure in the New Internet Economy, right here in the US. pic.twitter.com/u97CMk1rBT
— Injective 🥷 (@injective) July 16, 2026
The filing raises a fundamental question in financial markets: who really owns a security and who keeps track of that. Traditionally, that’s been the job of transfer agents, middlemen who track ownership, handle transfers and decide who gets payouts or voting rights. Injective now wants that function embedded natively into its infrastructure.
Injective’s leadership argues that current record-keeping methods are slow, fragmented, and dependent on multiple intermediaries. By digitizing this process, the company believes tokenized assets can settle faster, carry clearer proof of ownership, and remain fully compliant with U.S. securities regulations.
The network claims its systems can process transactions in less than a second, a speed advantage it hopes will attract institutions looking to explore tokenized real-world assets.
The broader tokenized asset market has continued to grow, with on-chain real world asset value reaching about $34 billion, according to data from RWA.xyz, indicating increasing demand for blockchain-based ownership structures over traditional paper-based systems.
The SEC filing was made just one day after Injective said it joined the x402 Foundation, a Linux Foundation-backed project building common payment standards for AI agents and automated online transactions.
Injective is officially a core member of the x402 Foundation under the @linuxfoundation alongside Google, AWS, Visa, Mastercard, Stripe, Coinbase, Circle and major industry leaders.
We’re excited to help shape the future of internet-native payments for the agentic economy.
— Injective 🥷 (@injective) July 15, 2026
Heavyweights such as Google, Visa, Mastercard, Stripe, Coinbase and Circle are among the group as are some forty other organizations working in payments, cloud computing and blockchain infrastructure.
All told, the moves suggest Injective is branching out well beyond traditional DeFi use cases, making inroads in tokenized securities, real world asset settlement and the emerging machine-to-machine economy of payments — all while trying to remain squarely within the bounds of U.S. regulations.
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