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Davis Polk Discusses Agency Guidance on Capital Treatment of Tokenized Securities

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Reserve Board, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (collectively, the federal banking agencies) issued new frequently asked questions on how tokenized securities are treated under the capital rules.1

Key takeaways

First, implicit in the guidance is that it is permissible for banking organizations to hold tokenized securities as principal and receive tokenized securities as collateral.

Second, the guidance should not be interpreted as permitting parity capital treatment for all tokenized securities. The gating requirement is that an eligible tokenized security must provide identical legal rights as the non-tokenized form of the security. Banking organizations should not assume that all tokenized securities confer identical legal rights to those of the security in its non-tokenized form.

Banking organizations considering holding tokenized securities, entering into derivatives referencing tokenized securities or receiving tokenized securities as collateral should consider the following procedural steps before applying parity capital treatment to tokenized security positions:

ENDNOTES

1 12 C.F.R. Part 1 (OCC), Part 217 (Federal Reserve Board) and Part 324 (FDIC).

2 12 C.F.R. § 217.2 (definition of “financial collateral”).

3 See, e.g., 12 C.F.R. § 217.2 (definition of “eligible margin loan” – “liquid and readily marketable debt or equity securities”; definition of “repo-style transaction” – “liquid and readily marketable securities”); 12 C.F.R. § 217.37(c)(3)(iv) (longer assumed holding period and higher supervisory haircuts for netting sets of collateralized transactions with “illiquid collateral”); 12 C.F.R. § 217.132(c)(9)(iv)(A)(2)(iii) (same for netting sets of derivatives with “illiquid collateral” under SA-CCR).

4 See, e.g., 12 C.F.R. § 217.37(c)(3).

5 Under the capital rules, collateral is generally recognized as a credit risk mitigant under one of two approaches: (1) the collateral haircut approach (a.k.a. “E-C treatment”), which is available for eligible margin loans, repo-style transactions and collateralized derivative contracts or (2) the simple approach (a.k.a. “risk substitution treatment”), which is available for any exposure type. See, e.g., 12 C.F.R. § 217.37(b) (simple approach) and (c) (collateral haircut approach).

6 Seee.g., 12 C.F.R. § 217.3 (requiring that banking organizations must “conduct a sufficient legal review to conclude with a well-founded basis,” that the transaction meets the definition of an eligible margin loan or repo-style transaction, as applicable, as an operational requirement for recognition of eligible margin loans and repo-style transactions).

7 Seee.g., 12 C.F.R. § 217.2 (definitions of “eligible margin loan” and “repo-style transaction”).

This post is based on a Davis, Polk & Wardwell LLP memorandum, “Federal Banking Agencies Issue Guidance on Capital Treatment of Tokenized Securities,” dated March 12, 2026, and available here. 

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