Tokenized stock exchange LISE received formal approval from France’s regulator on October 13, 2025, clearing the way for an EU-sanctioned experiment in on‑chain equity trading and settlement.
LISE platform operating rules and EU pilot regime tokenization
The AMF signed off on LISE SA’s detailed operating rules and rulebook, authorising the venue to test a distributed‑ledger-based market under the EU Pilot Regime. The AMF statement confirms the approval process and the scope of supervisory oversight.
LISE’s documentation blends conventional exchange practice with DLT specifics. Key points cover participant eligibility, order matching, settlement logic and disclosure rules. In addition, the rules impose entry conditions and technical safeguards to limit operational risk.
Who can list: SME listings tokenized stocks and the total tokenized securities cap
LISE targets French joint‑stock companies and limited partnerships with market capitalisations below €500 million, and it requires that at least half of issuers be SMEs with valuations under €200 million. That focus aims to stimulate funding routes for smaller firms through tokenisation.
Crucially, the Pilot framework sets a total tokenized securities cap of €6 billion for admitted instruments. The cap is designed to limit systemic exposure while authorities observe market behaviour during the experimental window.
Trading model: tokenized shares retail trading, real time settlement blockchain and digital wallet share ownership
LISE compresses trading and settlement on a single ledger. As a result, trades can settle on‑chain in near‑real time rather than following traditional T+2 cycles. This design reduces counterparty and settlement risk and speeds final transfer of ownership.
Retail access is central to the experiment: pending final banking authorisation, LISE plans to enable tokenized shares retail trading via regulated digital wallets, with an intended roll‑out in early 2026. Retail users must pass a blockchain knowledge test before they gain direct trading rights.
Meanwhile, issuers and intermediaries must align operational and KYC processes ahead of any retail launch.
Market rules, prohibitions and operational limits
The LISE rulebook includes explicit conduct rules. For example, it prohibits high‑frequency algorithmic trading and bans provision of direct electronic access to third parties. These limits aim to reduce latency‑driven strategies and to protect a retail‑centric market structure.
Other measures cover disclosure obligations, participant onboarding, AML/KYC checks and incident reporting. Together, these safeguards attempt to balance innovation with market stability and investor protection.
Investor protection and operational risks
While the on‑chain model promises speed and transparency, it creates new operational vectors. Custody and key management are critical; deficient practices can expose token holders to theft or loss. Likewise, smart contract bugs and interoperability failures could disrupt trading or settlement.
It is therefore important that market participants prioritise robust custody arrangements, frequent audits and clear contingency procedures. Additionally, surveillance tools that combine on‑chain analytics with traditional market monitoring are needed to deter abuse.
Practical implications for issuers and investors
For issuers, LISE offers an alternative listing route that can enable fractional ownership and potentially lower issuance costs. However, they must prepare for continuous disclosure, digital registry obligations and the technical task of tokenising existing share capital.
For investors, the benefits include faster finality and direct control via wallets. Nevertheless, investors should weigh custody, counterparty and smart contract risks before participating. In our experience, integration phases for DLT market systems commonly require coordinated testing with custodians, settlement banks and supervisors over several months; issuers and intermediaries should begin compliance and technical audits now.
Regulatory timeframe and next steps
LISE will run within the Pilot Regime for an initial three‑year period, extendable to six years if regulators permit. During that time, authorities will collect evidence to shape permanent rules on tokenised markets. A successful pilot could inform broader European frameworks for on‑chain securities markets.
As regulators and market operators iterate, stakeholders must ensure legal clarity on tokenised rights and maintain resilient custody and settlement arrangements to support orderly markets.
As ESMA notes:
“the DLT Pilot Regime provides the legal framework for trading and settlement of transactions in crypto‑assets that qualify as financial instruments under MiFID II”.
Source: https://en.cryptonomist.ch/2025/10/14/tokenized-stock-exchange-lise-sme-token-trading/