BlackRock looks to sidestep Clarity yield issues, filing for two new tokenized money market funds


BlackRock looks to sidestep Clarity yield issues, filing for two new tokenized money market funds


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BlackRock is accelerating its push to bring Wall Street yields to the blockchain, filing paperwork with US regulators to introduce a pair of tokenized money market funds.

The move represents a major escalation in the asset management giant’s strategy to bridge traditional financial instruments with the rapidly expanding digital asset ecosystem.

According to May 8 filings submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the world’s largest asset manager intends to issue digital shares for an existing multibillion-dollar treasury fund, alongside an entirely new vehicle tailored specifically for the crypto-native market.

The dual rollout targets a growing demographic of investors who park their wealth in digital wallets and stablecoins rather than traditional brokerage accounts. It also cements BlackRock’s position as a dominant infrastructure provider for the burgeoning tokenized real-world asset (RWA) sector.

Nate Geraci, president of investment advisory firm NovaDius Wealth, characterized the filings as a bellwether for the broader financial industry.

“You’ll be seeing much more of this from top asset managers,” Geraci said, noting that BlackRock’s initiative would be the first of many similar strategic pivots expected from institutional heavyweights in the near future.

BSTBL and BRSRV

The first of the two proposed products will digitize a portion of the BlackRock Select Treasury-Based Liquidity Fund (BSTBL).

The $6.1 billion mutual fund, which operates under the strict quality and diversification mandates of Rule 2a-7 under the Investment Company Act of 1940, will now offer a blockchain-based share class that operates concurrently with its traditional institutional shares.

The tokenized BSTBL securities are slated to debut on the Ethereum network.

True to its traditional counterpart, the digital class will maintain a conservative investment strategy, allocating 100% of its assets into cash, US Treasury bills, and overnight government-secured repurchase agreements.

The portfolio mandates a dollar-weighted average maturity of 60 days or less, ensuring high liquidity and minimal risk.

The second filing introduces a ground-up tokenized product: the BlackRock Daily Reinvestment Stablecoin Reserve Vehicle (BRSRV).

Unlike the Ethereum-exclusive BSTBL shares, BRSRV is designed for multi-chain deployment, maximizing its interoperability across the decentralized web.

The fund is constructed as a treasury-backed money market product and mirrors the strict underlying asset profile of BSTBL. This means that it focuses exclusively on short-term US government obligations with maturities under 93 days.

However, its structural purpose is distinctly aimed at serving as institutional-grade plumbing for the crypto economy.

Positioning for the GENIUS Act

Industry analysts view the BRSRV filing as a highly strategic maneuver designed to capitalize on the shifting US regulatory landscape, particularly the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for US Stablecoins (GENIUS) Act.

Market experts broadly speculate that BlackRock is positioning the fund to serve as a compliant, yield-bearing reserve asset for stablecoin issuers under the impending legislative framework.

The asset manager is already deeply entrenched in this space, currently managing roughly $65 billion in existing stablecoin reserves.

Notably, BlackRock recently submitted a comment letter to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) regarding the agency’s proposed framework for permitted payment stablecoin issuers (PPSIs).

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