Robinhood’s Tokenized Stocks Stir Debate: Catalyst or Competition for Altcoins?
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Robinhood EU took a bold step toward merging traditional finance (TradFi) and blockchain, launching a batch of tokenized private company stocks, including big names like OpenAI and SpaceX.
Beyond crypto industry buzz, this development also ignited debate over whether this new wave of tokenized equities will invigorate or drain the altcoin market.
Experts Debate the Impact of Stock Tokens on the Altcoin Market
BeInCrypto reported Robinhood unveiling blockchain plans, including tokenized US stocks and ETFs in Europe with 24/5 trading and dividend support via Arbitrum.
Blockchain data shows a Robinhood-linked wallet (0xcB…f556) has already minted 2,309 OpenAI stock tokens on Arbitrum (ARB). The same deployer address has created or tested 213 tokens on the network, signaling an expansion plan.
Yet even as this milestone draws attention, experts remain divided on what it means for crypto, especially where altcoins are concerned. Some believe the excitement is misplaced.
Hitesh Malviya, a crypto builder, is skeptical that tokenized stocks will drive capital into altcoins. In his view, the calendar rotation argues that stock traders have outperformed altcoins over the past 30 months.
“Tokenized stocks are not a bullish catalyst for alts,” he stated.
Based on this, the builder does not expect that trend to reverse just because equities are moving on-chain.
Instead, he sees a shift in volume toward tokenized crypto stocks and protocol-controlled value (PCV) assets, particularly outside the US.
Markets are already seeing this shift, with Kamino Finance announcing its integration of tokenized equities dubbed xStocks into the Solana ecosystem.
“Via the Kamino Lend integration, users will be able to deploy their xStocks as collateral via a new xStocks Market, enabling borrows against the following assets: AAPLx NVDAx GOOGLx METAx TSLAx SPYx QQQx,” Kamino articulated.
Meanwhile, the debate goes beyond performance, extending to structure. Carlos Domingo, CEO of Securitize, is one of the loudest critics of Robinhood’s tokenization model.
He warns that current “wrapper” methods, where different platforms issue their own blockchain versions of the same stock, do not solve any real problems. Instead, they worsen liquidity fragmentation.
Domingo points out the irony in Robinhood’s messaging. He cites comments from Johann Kerbrat, Robinhood’s crypto chief, who said he dislikes having fragmented Tesla tokens across multiple platforms.
“Isn’t this exactly what Robinhood is doing, creating their own version of a Tesla token (that incidentally it is not even a token representing the equity)?? Not sure I get this comment for their head of crypto, since it completely contradicts what they have just announced,” Domingo challenged.
For Some, Utility Trumps Standardization
Others, however, are more pragmatic. Trader and crypto personality S4mmy sees no issue. However, his outlook is contingent on the tokens genuinely entitling holders to ownership of the underlying asset and its cash flows. In other words, utility and legal rights matter more than standardization.
This perspective came in response to investor Mike Dudas, who highlighted the looming complexity of a multi-token future for equities.
In a tongue-in-cheek post, Dudas asked whether users would eventually have to choose among various tickers for the same company.
Adding to the skepticism, crypto investor Beanie argues that stock tokenization is bearish for crypto. His main claim is that capital is finite.
If high-performing tech stocks become more accessible and easier to trade on-chain, they could siphon liquidity away from underperforming or hype-driven altcoins. Some of these altcoins still trade at multibillion-dollar valuations despite offering little real-world utility.
Still, whether the current format is flawed or not, tokenized stocks appear to be a growing trend. Solana-based Kamino Finance added support for tokenized equities, allowing users to swap between crypto and stocks and use them as collateral in lending markets.
The move positions Kamino alongside Robinhood in betting that retail and DeFi users want exposure to traditional assets without leaving the blockchain.
Robinhood’s version of stock tokens might not be perfect. However, it has accelerated a new experimentation phase at the intersection of equities and DeFi.
Whether this eventually uplifts crypto or draws attention away from it may depend less on ideology and more on execution, and, ultimately, who captures the liquidity first.
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