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Wall Street's Next Blockchain Bet: Securitize Eyes $1 Billion SPAC Deal With Cantor Fitzgerald

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Securitize's next chapter could be written on Wall Street. The blockchain firm, known for turning traditional assets into digital tokens, is reportedly in advanced talks to go public through a merger with Cantor Equity Partners II Inc. CEPT, a blank-check company backed by Cantor Fitzgerald LP. People familiar with the matter said the deal could value Securitize at more than $1 billion, though deliberations are still ongoing and the company could choose to stay private. Both Securitize and Cantor have not commented on the ongoing discussions.

Behind the headlines lies a much bigger shift: the tokenization of real-world assetsa concept once confined to crypto circlesis starting to draw serious institutional attention. Securitize, backed by BlackRock, Morgan Stanley MS, ARK Venture Fund, Tradeweb Markets, and Nomura Holdings, has been building the pipes for that transformation. Its platform already hosts BlackRock's tokenized BUIDL fund, giving investors on-chain exposure to traditional assets like S&P indices and money-market instruments. For Wall Street, this could be an early sign of how blockchain technology is quietly threading into mainstream finance.

Securitize isn't just another crypto experiment. The firm is licensed by the US Securities and Exchange Commission as a registered transfer agent and operates across parts of Europe and Japanan unusual level of regulatory footing for a blockchain startup. Cantor Equity Partners II, led by Cantor Fitzgerald chairman Brandon Lutnick, raised $240 million in May through its IPO, giving it dry powder for such a deal. If the merger proceeds, it could become one of the most closely watched public listings in the digital-asset space, testing whether tokenization has finally earned a place on the public markets.