The eu risks losing its competitive edge in the rapidly growing tokenization market to the u.s. due to overly restrictive dlt pilot regime, potentially leading to capital migration. this creates uncertainty and a less favorable environment for digital asset development within the bloc.
The warning comes directly from a group of eight eu-regulated digital asset firms, providing an industry-insider perspective on a critical regulatory issue affecting the region's competitiveness.
The potential for capital and liquidity to migrate from the eu to the u.s. due to a less favorable regulatory environment creates a bearish outlook for eu-based rwa projects and could dampen overall sentiment for global rwa adoption if a major economic bloc lags significantly.
The concerns are about structural competitive disadvantages and permanent shifts in global capital markets that could materialize over the next few years if the eu doesn't act quickly, with the u.s. gaining a multi-year head start.
Policy Share Share this article Copy link X icon X (Twitter) LinkedIn Facebook Email EU at risk of falling behind the U.S. in tokenization rules, digital asset firms warn The EU must fix its pilot regime now or watch capital markets shift permanently to the U.S., a group of blockchain firms warned policymakers on Thursday. By Krisztian Sandor | Edited by Nikhilesh De Feb 5, 2026, 2:00 p.m. Make us preferred on Google (Shutterstock, modified by CoinDesk) What to know : A group of six EU-regulated digital asset firms is warning European regulators that they are at risk of squandering the bloc's early lead in blockchain-based capital markets as the U.S. moves faster on tokenization. The firms say the EU’s distributed ledger technology pilot regime is too restrictive, and could lead to capital migrating to U.S. markets. Key U.S. trading venues like the CME, NYSE and Nasdaq all laid out tokenized asset plans. The race to modernize capital markets with blockchain is heating up — and Europe could be blowing its early lead to the U.S., a group of blockchain firms warned in a Thursday letter. Eight EU-regulated digital asset firms — Securitize, 21X, Boerse Stuttgart Group's Seturion, Central Securities Depository, Lise, OpenBrick, STX and Axiology — are urging policymakers to fast-track changes to the bloc’s distributed ledger technology Pilot Regime, saying that current limitations are holding the region back just as the U.S. begins to move decisively. STORY CONTINUES BELOW Don't miss another story. Subscribe to the State of Crypto Newsletter today . See all newsletters Sign me up By signing up, you will receive emails about CoinDesk products and you agree to our terms & conditions and privacy policy . "While Europe deliberates, the U.S. has already acted and is on track to own the digital rails of the future global economy," the firms said in the letter. Tokenization refers to the process of issuing real-world assets like stocks, bonds or funds as blockchain-based tokens. Industry backers see it as a way to dramatically improve settlement speeds, increase transparency and unlock fractional ownership. It's potentially a huge market: several reports project that tokenized assets could swell to multiple trillion dollars over the few next years. The EU was among the early movers to introduce a legal framework for tokenized financial infrastructure, but its regulatory sandbox — the DLT Pilot Regime — was designed with cautious limits. The firms behind the letter argue that those limits now risk turning the EU’s tokenization lead into a "success trap," while the U.S. is advancing fast. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) recently granted a no-action letter to the DTCC, the nation's largest settlement firm, clearing the way for full-scale tokenized settlement. A T+0 (instant settlement) market could be live in the U.S. as soon as 2026, with exchange operators Nasdaq and New York Stock Exchange having laid out plans for around-the-clock trading with tokenized securities. CME Group , which operates a key derivatives trading venue for Wall Street firms, is collaborating with Google on a tokenized cash collateral with plans to launch later this year. That would give the U.S. a four-year head start before the EU’s broader Market Integration and Supervision Package (MISP) takes full effect by 2030, the letter warned. The group proposed changes to the framework to avoid this scenario. That includes removing restrictions around what assets can be tokenized, raising the transaction volume cap to €100 billion to €150 billion from the pilot's €6 billion to €9 billion limit and eliminating the six-year limitation on licenses. "If Europe remains constrained until 2030, global liquidity will not wait — it will migrate permanently to U.S. markets, undermining also the euro’s competitiveness through regulation rather than technology," the letter said. "The EU must act now to avoid repeating the mistakes of its capital markets history." European Union Tokenization Real World Assets Regulations Securitize Börse Stuttgart