SEC targets 20-year-old rule standing between Wall Street and blockchain trading


SEC targets 20-year-old rule standing between Wall Street and blockchain trading



The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is moving to dismantle a stock-trading rule that has governed Wall Street for two decades.

On June 11, the agency submitted a proposal that would rescind Rule 611 of Regulation NMS, the trade-through rule that requires trading centers to prevent stock trades from executing at prices worse than protected quotes displayed elsewhere. It would also eliminate Rule 610(e), which restricts locked and crossed quotations, along with related definitions.

For most of Wall Street, the proposal is a market-structure fight over routing, exchanges, wholesalers, displayed quotes, and execution quality.

For crypto firms and banks exploring tokenized shares, it is something more specific: the SEC is targeting one of the rules that made blockchain-based stock trading difficult to reconcile with the national market system.

A rule built for routed markets

Rule 611 was adopted in 2005 as part of Regulation NMS, a broad overhaul of US equity-market rules. The goal was to protect investors from having their orders executed at inferior prices when a better displayed quote was available on another exchange.

In practice, that system tied stock trading to the National Best Bid and Offer (NBBO), the best displayed bid and offer across protected venues. Broker routers, exchanges, and trading firms built systems around that obligation.

However, that framework is harder to apply to automated market makers (AMMs), the software-based trading pools that power much of decentralized finance.

AMMs do not work like Nasdaq, NYSE, or Cboe. They price trades through liquidity pools, bonding curves, slippage, and block-time execution.

Alex Thorn, Galaxy Digital’s head of research, pointed out that the rule was one of the largest structural barriers to DeFi-based trading of tokenized equities.

“An AMM cannot comply with 611 by construction,” Thorn said. It executes against a bonding curve at the pool price, with slippage and block-time granularity.

The issue is not simply a technical inconvenience. An on-chain pool cannot easily route intermarket sweep orders, ingest consolidated market data with the latency guarantees expected in US equities, or halt a swap because a better quote briefly appears on Nasdaq.

Under the current framework, a pool trading a tokenized version of an NMS stock could repeatedly print prices that differ from protected off-chain quotes. That creates the risk that the pool would be viewed as constantly violating the trade-through rule or functioning as an unlawful trading center.

Rule 610(e) raises a related problem. AMM prices can drift as liquidity shifts and trades move through a pool. That means on-chain prices could lock or cross the displayed NBBO, something current market rules are designed to prevent.

Why crypto sees an opening

Tokenized stocks are blockchain-based representations of company shares or share-linked claims. Supporters argue they could allow around-the-clock trading, fractional ownership, faster settlement, collateral mobility, and broader international access.

The market has been small compared with traditional equities, but interest has increased as banks, crypto exchanges, and asset managers look for ways to bring regulated financial instruments onto public or permissioned blockchains.

Christopher Perkins, chief executive of 250 Digital Asset Management, said Regulation NMS and the NBBO have been among the biggest obstacles to unlocking tokenized equities. If Rule 611 is rescinded, he said, “it’s a whole new ballgame.”

He added:

“Major unlock for DeFi. Incumbents won’t be happy.”

That reaction reflects a view spreading among digital-asset firms: tokenized equities do not need a technological breakthrough as much as a regulatory pathway. Securities are already largely electronic.

In the US, ownership is recorded through a system of depositories, brokers, and transfer agents. Tokenization would change the ledger and settlement architecture, not the economic concept of a share.

The harder question is whether that new architecture can satisfy the obligations embedded in securities law and market-structure rules.

That is where the SEC proposal becomes important. If the trade-through rule is rescinded, the focus would likely shift more heavily toward best execution, the broker-dealer obligation to use reasonable diligence to obtain favorable terms for customers under prevailing market conditions.

Indeed, Thorn said that the framework is more compatible with blockchain trading than a per-trade NBBO protection requirement. A broker routing to an on-chain pool could review execution quality over time, compare venues, and document its routing process.

He said:

“That framework can accommodate an AMM. The old one never could.”

A broader market-structure fight

Meanwhile, the proposal also reaches beyond tokenized shares.

Max Resnick, lead economist at Anza, a Solana-focused development firm, said rescinding Rule 611 could affect long-running debates over exchange design, including asymmetric speed bumps.

Speed bumps are delays used by some trading venues to reduce the advantage of ultra-fast market participants. Asymmetric speed bumps treat different order types or market participants differently, which has made them contentious in the US market structure.

CryptoSlate Daily Brief

Daily signals, zero noise.

Market-moving headlines and context delivered every morning in one tight read.