Crypto World
Kraken Enables Tokenized Stock Collateral for Leveraged Trades
Kraken has started accepting select tokenized stocks and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) as collateral for futures and margin trading, enabling eligible customers to take leveraged positions without first selling those tokenized holdings.
The feature initially covers 10 tokenized instruments, including major single-name equities such as Apple, Nvidia, and Tesla, as well as tokenized ETFs including Strategy, the SPDR S&P 500 ETF, and Invesco QQQ Trust.
Key takeaways
- Kraken now accepts specific tokenized stocks and ETFs as collateral for futures and margin trading, reducing the need to liquidate existing positions.
- Eligible assets receive risk-based collateral “haircuts,” with broad-market ETFs discounted less than more volatile stocks.
- Collateral limits apply per asset class, with broad-market ETFs capped at up to $1 million in collateral value.
- Access is limited to eligible clients outside the United States; futures collateral in the European Economic Area and margin collateral in other eligible jurisdictions.
How Kraken’s collateral framework works
According to Kraken, each supported tokenized stock or ETF is assigned a collateral haircut, which reduces the lending value of posted collateral depending on perceived risk. Broad-market ETFs receive the lowest discount at 10%, while certain more volatile holdings are discounted more heavily—Kraken states that Strategy and Robinhood are discounted by 30%.
In addition to haircuts, Kraken also set collateral limits for each asset. Broad-market ETFs can be posted up to $1 million in collateral value. Most individual stocks have a limit of $250,000. Tokenized gold and Circle shares are capped at $100,000.
The exchange emphasized that both the haircut percentages and the collateral limits are subject to periodic review and may change over time.
Scope: which tokenized assets are included
Kraken’s initial rollout supports 10 tokenized stocks and ETFs. The list includes widely followed names such as Apple, Nvidia, and Tesla, along with Strategy.
For broad market exposure, the exchange includes tokenized ETF products such as the SPDR S&P 500 ETF and Invesco QQQ Trust. The collateral program also extends to tokenized gold and Circle shares, though these carry different collateral caps compared with the equity and ETF set.
Geographic limits and trading use cases
Kraken said the collateral support is available only to eligible clients outside the United States. Tokenized stocks can be used as collateral for futures trading in the European Economic Area.
Margin collateral support is available in other eligible jurisdictions outside the European Economic Area. Kraken did not indicate that the tokenized-collateral feature is generally available worldwide, so customers should confirm eligibility in their region before planning trades around it.
Why this matters for tokenized markets
Kraken’s decision aligns with a broader push to expand the real-world utility of tokenized assets beyond simple trading. The core investor benefit is straightforward: if tokenized securities can be posted as collateral, they can help users access leverage and financing-style trades without triggering a sale that may be subject to liquidity constraints or other execution considerations.
It also fits into a wider pattern of exchange and market infrastructure developments aimed at making tokenized securities usable across more parts of capital markets—particularly as collateral, settlement components, and building blocks for structured lending.
For example, earlier this year, Cointelegraph reported that Franklin Templeton and Binance launched a program allowing institutions to use tokenized money market fund shares as trading collateral while the underlying assets remained in regulated off-exchange custody. Separately, BlackRock’s tokenized US Treasury fund, BUIDL, has been accepted as trading collateral on platforms including Binance, Crypto.com, and Deribit, reflecting growing interoperability for tokenized government and cash-like instruments.
Other market plumbing has also been advancing. Cointelegraph noted that Tradeweb executed what it described as a first real-time purchase and sale of a tokenized US Treasury settled against tokenized cash on the Canton Network. While those developments differ in mechanism from Kraken’s collateral haircuts, they collectively point to a trend: tokenized assets are increasingly being integrated into the operational flows that support trading and financing.
Market growth signals: tokenized stocks remain a fast-rising segment
Data compiled by RWA.xyz suggests tokenized real-world assets have grown to roughly $32.6 billion in distributed value. Within that broader total, tokenized stocks reportedly increased to about $2 billion from approximately $381 million a year earlier.
That growth backdrop helps explain why exchanges are moving to make tokenized holdings more functional. As the number and variety of tokenized securities increase, collateral acceptance can become a competitive differentiator—especially for users who want to maintain exposure while accessing leverage or margin capacity.
For readers tracking the sector, RWA.xyz maintains an accessible overview of tokenized stock distribution, including categories under RWA.xyz stocks.
Going forward, investors and traders should watch for Kraken’s next rounds of updates: whether additional tokenized equities and ETFs are added, how haircuts and collateral caps change with volatility and market conditions, and how the exchange expands availability across jurisdictions outside the United States.
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