PANews reported on October 25 that according to Financefeeds, Swiss cryptocurrency bank AMINA Bank has partnered with Luxembourg tokenization company Tokeny to provide a regulated digital securities issuance channel. The partnership connects AMINA's bank-grade custody and settlement with Tokeny's ERC-3643-based issuance stack. The goal is to create a single platform that handles both primary issuance and qualified custody. Banks hold investor funds and supervise accounts within the framework of supervision by the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA), while smart contracts execute qualification and transfer rules on the chain. The two companies said that by eliminating custom integrations and reducing manual checks, this can shorten the time to market for institutional issuers from months to weeks.
Swiss crypto bank AMINA partners with Tokeny to launch compliant digital securities issuance platform
Author: PA一线
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

Pioneer's View: Crypto Celebrity Interviews
Exclusive interviews with crypto celebrities, sharing unique observations and insights

PAData: Web3 in Data
Data analysis and visual communication of industry hot spots help users understand the meaning and opportunities behind each data.

A complete review of the 1011 encryption storm
An in-depth review of the epic liquidation events of October 11: from the Trump tariff black swan event to high-leverage margin calls, stablecoin depegging, and market maker liquidity depletion.

AI Agent: The Journey to Web3 Intelligence
The AI Agen innovation wave is sweeping the world. How will it take root in Web3? Let’s embark on this intelligent journey together

Memecoin Supercycle: The hype around attention tokenization
From joke culture to the trillion-dollar race, Memecoin has become an integral part of the crypto market. In this Memecoin super cycle, how can we seize the opportunity?

Real-time tracking of Bybit attack
Bybit suffered a security incident, and funds worth $1.44 billion were withdrawn. A North Korean hacker group was accused of being the perpetrator.

