Citi, Switzerland's SDX Join Forces to Tokenize $75B Pre-IPO Shares Market
Banking giant Citi and SIX Digital Exchange (SDX), the digital assets-focused arm of Switzerland's main stock exchange, are teaming up to tokenize non-publicly traded shares in a move to streamline a $75 billion market that's littered with PDFs and paper documents.
Citi will act as a custodian and issuer agent for tokenized versions of late stage, pre-IPO equities on SDX's regulated blockchain-based Central Securities Depository (CSD) platform, the companies said on Tuesday.
Citi said the platform, which is expected to go live in the third quarter, will exclude U.S. investors, but is otherwise global with an initial focus on Switzerland, Singapore and other parts of Asia.
Private shares in high-growth, venture-backed companies are a large and appealing subset of an alternative asset class that's valued in the trillions of dollars.
Firms with valuations of a billion dollars and more are remaining private for longer as market conditions dictate delays in IPOs for many. That means the companies are looking to secondary markets to help investors and employees get liquidity. But there's an access problem, and the transactions themselves are manual and cumbersome.
'The most notable characteristic of private markets is that there is no infrastructure, at least nothing scalable,' Nisha Surendran, digital asset emerging solutions lead at Citi Ventures, said in an interview.
Investors are typically faced with a daunting set of PDFs and paper documents to get through, and the settlement of a transaction can take from five to eight weeks — a process that has to be repeated when the investor wants to exit the position, Surendran explained.
'These investments are also hampered by the fact they don't flow into investors' wealth statements like other public securities do. Rather, they end up encapsulated in PDFs or paper documents or on other platforms,' she said.
While recent years have seen many traditional financial institutions looking at the tokenization of real-world assets, the very early days of this trend saw lots of attention focused on blockchain-enabled private markets, but with little actually delivered.
SDX CEO David Newns said many hopeful Web3 projects, which saw blockchain rails as a way to streamline outdated processes and enable easy access and distribution for private markets, came up against regulatory hurdles.
'There's a very mature digital-securities regulatory environment in Switzerland where we've been doing this now since 2021,' Newns said in an interview. 'That isn't the case elsewhere. The technology may have looked like it could address all the challenges, but problems around distribution, holding the instrument, and what that instrument represents legally from an investment perspective were not really solved.'

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