Amina Bank Enters EU's Blockchain Securities Market via 21X
Swiss-regulated crypto bank Amina has become the first fully licensed bank to join 21X, a blockchain-based securities trading and settlement venue operating under the European Union's Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT) Pilot Regime. The Zug-based institution will serve as a listing sponsor on the platform, working alongside Luxembourg's Tokeny to facilitate the issuance and lifecycle management of tokenized securities for institutional clients.
The move represents a structurally significant development in the tokenized real-world asset (RWA) space — one that perp traders should monitor as a longer-term demand signal for on-chain financial infrastructure.
What the EU DLT Pilot Regime Actually Means
Launched in 2023, the EU's DLT Pilot Regime functions as a regulatory sandbox, allowing market operators to test blockchain-based trading and settlement of financial instruments under controlled conditions. 21X received its infrastructure permit under this framework in December 2024, making it one of the few venues legally authorized to run regulated blockchain securities markets within the EU.
The regime is designed to help regulators assess how DLT infrastructure can be integrated into existing capital markets without destabilizing them. However, the framework has drawn criticism from industry participants who argue that current scale limitations and interoperability gaps will prevent European on-chain markets from competing with more permissive jurisdictions — a concern echoed by Baker McKenzie's European Financial Services practice as recently as June.
Interoperability Remains the Core Bottleneck
Baker McKenzie's Zurich partner Yves Mauchle put it plainly: institutional-scale tokenization only becomes viable when multiple market participants are transacting across common or interconnected platforms. Amina's entry into 21X addresses one piece of that puzzle — regulated bank participation in issuance — but the broader interoperability challenge remains unsolved.
RWA Market Context: $26.5 Billion and Growing
Amina's move doesn't occur in isolation. Tokenized RWA markets have now reached $26.5 billion in total value, according to RWA.xyz. Institutional momentum is building on multiple fronts: BNY, Nasdaq, and S&P Global recently backed the expansion of the Canton Network in the US, while Kraken launched tokenized equities trading for European users via its xStocks platform in September. Ondo Finance received regulatory approval in Liechtenstein in November to offer tokenized equity exposure to European investors.
Eight EU-regulated digital asset firms urged policymakers in February to accelerate digital asset legislation, warning that Europe risks ceding ground to the US and Asia in the tokenization race.
Trading Implications
- RWA-linked tokens as leading indicators: Growing institutional participation in tokenized securities infrastructure tends to precede broader on-chain capital inflows. Traders should watch RWA-adjacent tokens for early momentum shifts that could spill into ETH and layer-2 perp markets, given Ethereum's dominance as settlement infrastructure for tokenized assets.
- Low immediate volatility impact: This development is structural rather than catalytic. Expect no immediate spike in BTC or ETH funding rates or open interest as a direct result. The signal is medium-to-long term.
- ETH positioning: Continued institutional buildout on Ethereum-based tokenization platforms supports a constructive medium-term thesis for ETH perps. Monitor open interest trends on ETH for signs of institutional accumulation tied to RWA narrative cycles.
- Regulatory risk remains: The EU DLT Pilot's scale constraints are a known overhang. Any negative regulatory update — such as a failure to expand the sandbox or impose stricter limits — could act as a bearish catalyst for RWA-correlated altcoin perps.
- Watch for contagion from US RWA momentum: With US institutions aggressively expanding tokenization infrastructure, any divergence between EU and US regulatory progress could create cross-market volatility, particularly in assets with dual exposure to both jurisdictions.