Introduction
In a legal context, the definition is considerably more narrow, and varies from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. Should an instrument amount to a security according to a given country’s criteria, it is subject to heavy regulatory scrutiny.
What is a security token?
A security token is a token, issued on a blockchain, that represents a stake in some external enterprise or asset. These can be issued by entities like businesses or governments and serve the same purpose as their incumbent counterparts (i.e., stocks, bonds, etc.).
Why use security tokens?
To draw on an example, let’s say that a company wishes to distribute shares to investors in a tokenized form. These tokens can be designed to come with all of the same benefits one would expect from shares – notably, voting rights and dividends.
Transparency
Rapid settlement
Clearing and settlement have long been regarded as a bottleneck when it comes to the transfer of assets. While trades can be carried out near-instantly, reassigning ownership often takes time. On a blockchain, the process is automated and can be completed within minutes.
Uptime
The existing financial markets are somewhat limited in their uptime. They’re open for fixed periods during the days of the week, and closed on weekends. Digital asset markets, on the other hand, are active around the clock, every day of the year.
Divisibility
Art, real estate, and other high-value assets, once tokenized, could be opened up to investors that may not otherwise be able to invest. For instance, we could have a painting worth $5M could be tokenized into 5,000 pieces, such that each is worth $1,000. This would dramatically increase accessibility, while also providing increased levels of granularity over investments.
It’s worth noting, though, that some security tokens may have a limit on divisibility. In some cases, if voting or dividend rights are conferred as equity share, there could be a limit on token divisibility for execution purposes.
Security tokens vs. utility tokens – what’s the difference?
By contributing funds, users receive these digital tokens, which enable participation (either immediately or in the future) with the project’s network. They may confer voting rights to the holder, or serve as a protocol-specific currency to access products or services.
Utility tokens are not intrinsically valuable. If a project grows to be successful, investors are not entitled to a portion of the profits as would be the case for some traditional securities. We could analogize the tokens’ role to loyalty points. They can be used to purchase goods (or can be sold), but they offer no stake in the business distributing them.
Security tokens are issued in a fashion similar to utility tokens, though the distribution event is referred to as a Security Token Offering (STO). From an investment standpoint, however, both kinds of tokens represent vastly different instruments.
Typically, when investors purchase a security token, they are buying equity, bonds, or derivatives. Their tokens effectively serve as investment contracts and guarantee ownership rights over off-chain assets.
What makes a token a security?
Perhaps the most famous metric for attempting to determine whether a transaction amounts to an ‘investment contract’ is the Howey Test. In short, it seeks to ascertain whether an individual who invests in a common enterprise expects to profit as a result of the promoter (or a third party’s) efforts.
Each jurisdiction, of course, will adopt a different framework, but many follow similar logic.
Security tokens and programmable finance
Given the size of the markets today, tokenization could radically transform the traditional financial realm. Investors and institutions in the space would benefit immensely from a fully-digital approach to financial instruments.
Over the years, an ecosystem of centralized databases has created a great deal of friction. Institutions need to dedicate resources to administrative processes to manage external data that is incompatible with their own systems. A lack of industry-wide standardization adds costs to businesses and significantly delays settlement.
A blockchain is a shared database that any user or business can easily interact with. The functions previously handled by institutions’ servers could now be outsourced to a ledger used by the rest of the industry. By tokenizing securities, we can plug them into an interoperable network enabling rapid settlement times and global compatibility.
Closing thoughts
Should the promise of security tokens come to fruition, the operations of financial institutions could be significantly streamlined. In time, the use of blockchain-based tokens in place of traditional instruments may very well catalyze the merging of legacy and cryptocurrency markets.