Bitfinex Launches $10M Tokenized Bond Offering Amid Regulatory Debate

iconCrypto Economy
Share
Share IconShare IconShare IconShare IconShare IconShare IconCopy
AI summary iconSummary

expand icon
Bitfinex Securities has launched a $10M tokenized bond offering, following earlier issues totaling $6.2M since 2023. The bonds, in USDt and settled on Liquid Network, have already paid $1.1M in coupons. Targeting high-net-worth investors in Europe and Asia, the offering focuses on emerging-market private credit. The timing coincides with the U.S. securities vs commodities debate, as lawmakers push the CLARITY Act. The move reflects growing interest in risk-on assets amid regulatory uncertainty.

TL;DR

  • Bitfinex Securities completed four bond issuances since 2023, paying over $1.1 million.
  • The new tokenized bond offering aims to raise more than $10 million.
  • Buyers are primarily European and Asian high-net-worth individuals and crypto funds.

Stablecoin yield became one of the most divisive topics in digital finance during 2026, and Bitfinex Securities chose that charged backdrop to return to market with something concrete: tokenized bonds denominated in USDt, settled entirely on the Liquid Network, Bitcoin’s sidechain.

Since 2023 it ran four bond issuances totaling $6.2 million, three of which reached maturity and returned capital to investors on schedule. Across those cycles, bondholders collected over $1.1 million in coupon payments distributed across 20 on-chain transactions.

The figures are modest in absolute terms, but they prove something most comparable projects never managed to demonstrate: the model executes, pays out, and matures without breaking down.

The next round targets larger numbers. The new issuance for Luxembourg-based securitization fund ALTERNATIVE aims to raise more than $10 million — nearly doubling the cumulative total from the previous two years in a single offering. The structure stays consistent: 11-month duration, exposure to emerging-market private credit, with capital directed toward small businesses and women-led enterprises across developing economies.

Jesse Knutson, head of operations at Bitfinex, described the investor base as predominantly European and Asian: high-net-worth individuals and crypto-focused funds looking to put idle USDt balances to work without leaving the on-chain environment. Not retail. Not generalist allocators. Capital that already lives inside crypto infrastructure and needs a place to generate returns from within it.

The GENIUS Act Left a Door Open That Nobody Closed

The GENIUS Act, signed into law in July 2025, prohibited stablecoin issuers from paying yield directly to token holders. The legislation did not, however, extend that restriction to third parties structuring separate products that generate returns denominated in stablecoins. That distinction did not go unnoticed.

Exchanges and platforms built precisely on top of that gap: regulated instruments delivering yield on USDt without Tether, as issuer, distributing any interest itself. From the outside it reads like a legal technicality. From inside the sector, it separates operating from not operating.

Traditional banks read the situation very differently

Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan calculated in January that yield-bearing stablecoin products could pull as much as $6 trillion in deposits out of the conventional banking system. The logic runs straight: if savers earn returns on digital dollars outside traditional banks, capital migrates, and with it the lending capacity that banks depend on to function.

That collision of interests feeds directly into the debate surrounding the CLARITY Act, proposed legislation aimed at building a comprehensive regulatory framework for digital assets in the United States.

CLARITY Act on Cryptocurrencies

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong withdrew his support for the bill on January 14, identifying stablecoin yield as one of the unresolved sticking points blocking progress. Senator Bernie Moreno expressed optimism on February 18 about moving forward before April. Prediction market platform Polymarket currently assigns a 70% probability that the CLARITY Act becomes law before the end of 2026.

Bitfinex Securities holds active licenses in Kazakhstan’s Astana International Financial Centre and in El Salvador, with Tether’s Hadron platform managing the token layer across its offerings. The platform lists approximately $250 million in regulated tokenized securities. While Washington debates which rules to apply, the platform continues issuing under the frameworks it already holds — and investors keep buying.

Disclaimer: The information on this page may have been obtained from third parties and does not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of KuCoin. This content is provided for general informational purposes only, without any representation or warranty of any kind, nor shall it be construed as financial or investment advice. KuCoin shall not be liable for any errors or omissions, or for any outcomes resulting from the use of this information. Investments in digital assets can be risky. Please carefully evaluate the risks of a product and your risk tolerance based on your own financial circumstances. For more information, please refer to our Terms of Use and Risk Disclosure.