Dennis O’Connell, President of the ERC-3643 Association, argued on June 3, 2026, that permissioned tokens are the essential bridge for institutional adoption of blockchain technology.
Speaking on the Converge podcast by The Defiant, the association head highlighted how the ERC-3643 protocol, also known as T-REX (Token for Regulated EXchanges), provides the compliance-first framework required to move trillions in real-world assets (RWAs) onto the Ethereum network.
With Tokeny Solutions having already tokenized over $32 billion in assets using this standard, the push for regulated on-chain transparency is gaining operational scale.
The discussion arrived at a pivotal time for the digital asset industry, as market participants estimate a $7.9 trillion pipeline for tokenized assets is currently forming. While current on-chain assets hover around $80 billion, the gap between speculative crypto-assets and traditional finance remains wide.
Standard ERC-20 tokens, which allow for anonymous and unrestricted transfers, fail to meet the strict KYC (Know Your Customer) and AML (Anti-Money Laundering) requirements that major banks and hedge funds must follow. Dennis O’Connell noted that ERC-3643 was purposely built to “try the hardest” to meet these institutional demands.
But the transition to permissioned systems isn’t without friction in the broader ecosystem. Dennis O’Connell admitted that many decentralized finance (DeFi) purists might “not like ERC-3643” because it includes features like clawbacks and mandatory on-chain identities.
He maintained that these controls are about consent and providing the specific “context” that institutional issuers need to manage their assets securely. For major players looking at the Ethereum network outlook, the ability to enforce transfer restrictions directly at the smart contract level is often a non-negotiable requirement.
Integrating regulatory compliance into the smart contract layer
The ERC-3643 standard operates through a modular architecture that separates identity management from token logic. This ensures that assets can only be held by verified participants who possess a valid ONCHAINID. Unlike traditional systems where compliance is an off-chain hurdle, this protocol embeds the rules into the asset itself.
If a counterparty fails to meet the eligibility criteria during a trade, the transaction is automatically denied by the network logic.
This “compliance by design” approach allows issuers to update rules as global laws evolve. For institutional investors, this functionality provides peace of mind that their digital holdings won’t inadvertently violate sanctions or local securities laws.
It also introduces a robust recovery process; if a user loses access to their private keys, the issuer can recover the tokens in a new wallet once the holder provides proof of identity. This serves as a significant safety net rarely found in standard DeFi protocols.
Expanding interoperability across non-EVM blockchains
On August 14, 2025, the Stellar Development Foundation (SDF) joined the ERC3643 Association, marking a major expansion of the standard beyond the Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) ecosystem. By bringing the trusted compliance framework to the Stellar network via the Soroban platform, the association aims to eliminate silos in the tokenization space.
This move highlights a growing industry consensus that interoperability is the only way to tap into global liquidity.
The technical reach of ERC-3643 has matured significantly since its introduction as an Ethereum Improvement Proposal (EIP) in 2021. The standard reached “Final” status in December 2024, with its version 4.0 having already achieved that milestone in 2023.
This formalization gives developers and legal teams a stable foundation to build complex financial products, ranging from private equity to money market funds, without the risk of fundamental protocol shifts.
The shift toward permissioned frameworks for real-world assets
The surge in institutional interest coincides with a period where Ondo Finance and other RWA players are testing the limits of public blockchain support. By using permissioned tokens, issuers retain the power to mint, burn, or block transfers at Any time.
While this degree of control feels antithetical to the “code is law” mantra of early bitcoiners, it is exactly what regulators like the SEC or ESMA demand for high-value securities.
As we head into the second half of 2026, the focus has shifted from whether assets will be tokenized to which standards will dominate the landscape. With $32 billion already successfully processed by Tokeny Solutions alone, the ERC-3643 standard is currently the frontrunner for enterprises.
The ability for auditors and regulators to review compliance data directly on-chain creates a level of transparency that traditional “black box” finance cannot match. And for the $7.9 trillion pipeline to become a reality, that transparency will be the ultimate differentiator.
