TL;DR

  • Franklin Templeton and Ondo Finance are tokenizing five ETFs, including gold ETFs and equity ETFs
  • The products are aimed at crypto users who want exposure to traditional markets via a digital wallet
  • The offering is being launched outside the US — regulatory uncertainty in the American market remains
  • Ondo Finance escaped an SEC investigation without charges in late 2025, which strengthened the company's credibility

Giant Meets DeFi: Franklin Templeton Goes On-Chain

One of the world's largest asset managers, Franklin Templeton, is partnering with tokenization platform Ondo Finance to bring five exchange-traded funds (ETFs) to the blockchain. This was reported by The Block. The products in question are intended to give crypto users access to traditional asset classes — including equities and gold — directly from a digital wallet, without going through traditional brokers.

The new products are explicitly aimed at what is described as a crypto-native audience: investors who already operate within decentralized finance and prefer to manage their entire portfolio on-chain.

"Blockchain is not a side project — it is a new foundation for how securities, funds, and collateral will be issued, traded, and managed." — Roger Bayston, Head of Digital Assets, Franklin Templeton
Franklin Templeton tokenizes five ETFs with Ondo Finance

Not Available in the US — Yet

An important caveat: according to available information on similar Franklin Templeton initiatives, the products are initially aimed at markets in Europe, the Asia-Pacific region, the Middle East, and Latin America. The reason is regulatory. US securities regulations currently do not provide clear frameworks for the issuance and trading of tokenized versions of regulated financial products.

The SEC has emphasized that "tokenized securities are still securities," meaning they fall under existing, complex regulation — not a separate, simplified track. Franklin Templeton's Head of Innovation, Sandy Kaul, has previously pointed to the need for clarification on how regulated products can be listed on crypto exchanges.

Franklin Templeton tokenizes five ETFs with Ondo Finance

Ondo Finance: From SEC Investigation to Wall Street Partner

Ondo's role in this agreement is no coincidence. Over the past two years, the platform has established itself as one of the most institutionally oriented players in the tokenization of real-world assets (RWA). The company was investigated by the SEC, but in November 2025, the investigation was dropped without recommended actions — an event that, according to industry observers, significantly accelerated the company's expansion plans in the US.

Ondo distinguishes itself from competitors like Securitize — which tokenizes broader asset classes including private equity and has, among other things, issued BlackRock's BUIDL fund — by focusing on deep technical integration between smart contracts and traditional banking infrastructure. The platform also indirectly competes with DeFi protocols like Aave and Compound when it comes to yield products.

The tokenization market has surpassed $35 billion in 2026 — with estimates of $4 trillion by 2030.

Franklin Templeton Has Been Tokenizing Since 2021

This is not Franklin Templeton's first step into tokenization. The company launched its first tokenized fund as early as 2021 — the Franklin OnChain U.S. Government Money Fund (FOBXX) — which uses blockchain for transaction processing and ownership registration. The fund had grown to $557 million in assets under management as of February 2026, according to available information.

In July 2025, the company adapted its money market funds to the new GENIUS Act — a US law requiring 100 percent reserves for stablecoin issuers — which, according to Franklin Templeton, has provided a "regulatory floor" for the broader tokenized asset ecosystem.

Risks and Expectations

Despite the institutional weight behind the collaboration, it is important to approach the news with a critical eye. Franklin Templeton itself has acknowledged significant risks associated with tokenized products: technological immaturity, security vulnerabilities such as loss or theft of cryptographic keys, and high price volatility. Specific details about which five ETFs are being tokenized, which blockchains are being used, and the exact timeline for launch have not yet been publicly disclosed by The Block.

Nevertheless, the collaboration between Franklin Templeton and Ondo Finance marks one of the clearest signals yet that institutional capital is actively seeking to integrate into crypto-native infrastructure — not just as an experiment, but as a distribution strategy.