Securitize will issue Currenc Group equity as digital tokens on public blockchains, with the tokenized shares launching simultaneously on Ethereum and Solana. The dual-chain rollout draws attention to Solana’s growing role in tokenizing real-world assets — positioning the network as more than a venue for speculative trading by pairing Ethereum’s security reputation with Solana’s faster, lower-cost transaction capability.
Price action has been subdued. Solana (SOL) was trading around $82.45 at the time of reporting, essentially flat over 24 hours and up about 4.5% over the past week, according to CoinGecko. Trading volume fell to roughly $3.55 billion, down 42% on the day, while market capitalization sat near $47.3 billion.
That muted movement contrasts with louder bullish forecasts. Analyst Crypto Patel highlighted that SOL has returned to a historical buy zone that preceded a 2,194% rally in the past, reigniting discussion over whether Solana could reach $1,000 in a future altseason. Such upside targets rest on multiple conditions — notably renewed risk appetite for altcoins, broader adoption of Solana-based services, and a sizable inflow of liquidity into the token.
More concretely, the Securitize–Currenc issuance is a practical milestone for tokenization. Issuing shares on both Ethereum and Solana signals an intent to distribute activity across chains, leveraging Ethereum’s perceived security while using Solana to handle higher throughput and lower fees. The two-chain approach is pitched as a pragmatic response to the scalability and cost demands of tokenized real-world assets.
Tokenized stocks are increasingly seen as an important segment of blockchain finance, and this latest offering underscores that narrative. While the debate over price milestones like $1,000 remains speculative and dependent on broader market dynamics, the expanding use of Solana for real-world-asset tokenization gives market participants a concrete development to monitor as the sector evolves.
