TL;DR:
The financial technology firm Ironlight Group raised $21 million in a Series A funding round aimed at expanding the infrastructure for the issuance and trading of tokenized securities in the United States. The round included participation from former TD Bank president and CEO Greg Braca, alongside institutional investors such as the Sei Development Foundation and Laidlaw Private Equity.
Ironlight develops a marketplace designed to manage the issuance, trading and settlement of blockchain-based securities through its broker-dealer subsidiary, Ironlight Markets. The platform operates as an alternative trading system, or ATS, under existing U.S. securities regulations.
Its system combines a centralized order book with blockchain settlement, allowing trades to be executed and settled directly onchain. FINRA approved the company’s ATS last year to operate with both traditional and tokenized securities.
The funds raised will be used to expand the trading platform and the technology stack underpinning it, designed to support tokenized versions of assets such as private debt, fixed income, private credit and real estate. Braca, who led TD Bank before joining the firm, was recently appointed executive chairman of Ironlight, with the goal of strengthening partnerships with traditional financial institutions.

U.S. regulators are advancing in defining the legal treatment of blockchain-based assets. Hester Peirce indicated last week that the Securities and Exchange Commission is working on a limited “innovation exemption” that would allow controlled experimentation with certain tokenized securities. The Federal Reserve also noted recently that banks must treat tokenized securities the same as traditional ones for capital purposes, underscoring that existing rules are “technology neutral“.
According to data from RWA.xyz, the market for tokenized real-world assets stands at approximately $26 billion. U.S. Treasury bonds account for around $11.2 billion, followed by approximately $5.7 billion in tokenized commodities and around $3.1 billion in asset-backed credit.