Paxos has become the first crypto-native company to receive clearing agency registration from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, positioning its subsidiary Paxos Securities Settlement Company as the only blockchain-native firm recognized by the SEC as a central securities depository.
The move positions Paxos as the only blockchain-native firm currently recognized by the SEC as a registered clearing agency operating as a central securities depository.
The decision comes after years of engagement between Paxos and U.S. regulators, including a no-action letter issued in 2019 and a live settlement pilot launched in 2020 with participation from major financial institutions.
According to Paxos, the registration could help modernize post-trade market infrastructure by enabling faster settlement times, lower operational costs, and reduced counterparty risk through blockchain technology.
SEC approval caps seven-year regulatory push
Paxos said the registration reflects nearly seven years of work with the SEC to demonstrate that blockchain infrastructure can operate within existing securities regulations.
“Our clearing agency registration is the result of seven years of work with the SEC, beginning with our No-Action Letter in 2019 and the settlement pilot we operated with some of the world’s largest and most sophisticated financial institutions.” Charles Cascarilla, CEO and Co-Founder, Paxos.
The company previously operated under SEC no-action relief to clear and settle U.S. equity trades on a daily basis beginning in February 2020.
During that pilot phase, Paxos worked with institutional participants including Credit Suisse and Societe Generale to test blockchain-based settlement infrastructure.
The approval effectively transitions Paxos from an experimental pilot operator into a formally recognized piece of U.S. market infrastructure.
Blockchain settlement enters mainstream finance
Clearing agencies play a critical role in financial markets by ensuring securities trades are processed, matched, and finalized correctly between buyers and sellers.
Traditional U.S. equity markets currently operate on a T+1 settlement cycle, meaning trades settle one business day after execution.
Paxos has argued that blockchain-based infrastructure can support same-day settlement, commonly referred to as T+0, while reducing operational friction.
The company said its blockchain settlement model demonstrated the ability to improve efficiency within a fully regulated framework during its pilot operations.
“This successfully demonstrated that blockchain-based post-trade infrastructure could deliver same-day settlement, reduce costs and improve operational efficiency within a fully regulated framework.” — Paxos, in its official statement.

Industry observers view the SEC approval as an important signal that regulators may be increasingly willing to allow blockchain technology deeper access into traditional financial systems, provided firms comply with securities laws and regulatory oversight requirements.
Why the decision matters for crypto investors
For crypto investors and digital asset market participants, the SEC’s approval represents more than a corporate licensing win.
It signals growing institutional acceptance of blockchain infrastructure as part of mainstream financial operations.
Analysts say regulated blockchain settlement systems could eventually reshape how securities transactions are processed in the United States, potentially opening the door for broader tokenization of traditional assets.
The approval also strengthens Paxos’ position in the digital asset industry at a time when crypto firms are increasingly pursuing regulatory clarity and institutional partnerships.
While the registration is considered a major milestone, Paxos will still need to continue meeting ongoing SEC regulatory standards as it expands its settlement operations.
The development arrives amid increasing competition among crypto infrastructure providers seeking to bridge blockchain technology with regulated financial markets.
As institutional adoption of digital assets grows, infrastructure firms capable of operating within established regulatory frameworks are expected to play a larger role in the evolution of global capital markets.
For investors, the SEC’s decision may serve as another indication that blockchain-based financial infrastructure is moving beyond experimentation and closer to institutional-scale deployment in traditional finance.