Securitize is wrapping an SEC-registered ETF linked to Nouriel Roubini’s Atlas America Fund into a digital security under Dubai’s VARA framework, adding another example of how tokenization is moving from crypto-native experiments toward regulated capital markets infrastructure.
The development is notable because it combines several themes investors are already watching: tokenized securities, real-world assets, regulated custody and cross-border fund distribution. Rather than creating a purely on-chain synthetic product, the structure points to a more institutional version of tokenization, where legal wrappers and regulatory approvals matter as much as blockchain settlement.
Roubini has long been one of crypto’s best-known skeptics, so the association with a tokenized product is striking. The story is not that Roubini has suddenly become a crypto promoter. It is that tokenization is increasingly being treated as financial plumbing rather than a speculative ideology.
That distinction matters for adoption. Institutions may remain cautious about volatile crypto assets, but still see value in digital securities, automated settlement and programmable ownership records. Tokenized ETFs and funds sit in that middle ground.
Dubai’s VARA framework has become a key part of the global competition to attract digital-asset businesses. By providing a dedicated regulatory path, the jurisdiction is positioning itself as a hub for tokenized securities, exchanges and institutional crypto services.
For the RWA sector, the challenge remains scale. Tokenized products need liquidity, investor access, custody, compliance and clear redemption mechanics. But each regulated launch adds to the market’s evidence base that tokenization is becoming a serious capital-markets track, not just a DeFi slogan.
This coverage is based on information from The Defiant.
This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.
This report is based on information from The Defiant, available at The Defiant


