BlackRock manages $14 trillion. It’s the most powerful asset manager on the planet. And on Friday, it told the world exactly where it thinks finance is heading.
In two separate SEC filings submitted on May 8, BlackRock proposed putting some of its most important products directly onto the Ethereum blockchain. One filing outlines a brand new tokenised Treasury reserve fund. The other proposes creating “OnChain Shares” for its $7 billion Select Treasury Based Liquidity Fund, a traditional money-market vehicle that would maintain its official ownership records on Ethereum using the ERC-20 token standard.
Two filings in one day. Both tied to Ethereum. Both pointing in the same direction: the largest pools of institutional capital in the world are moving onto blockchain.
What Did BlackRock Actually File?
The first filing introduces the BlackRock Daily Reinvestment Stablecoin Reserve Vehicle. This is a new fund that invests in cash, short-term US Treasury securities (with maturities of 93 days or less), and overnight repurchase agreements backed by government bonds.
The fund is designed to deliver stable income while prioritising liquidity and capital preservation, similar to a traditional money-market fund. The difference is that it will issue “OnChain Shares” through a permissioned system connected to multiple public blockchains. Securitize will serve as the transfer agent, maintaining ownership records through a hybrid model that combines blockchain transactions with off-chain identity verification.
The entry point is steep. A $3 million minimum investment restricts access to institutional buyers. This isn’t a retail product. It’s built for stablecoin issuers and on-chain participants who want reliable yield without leaving the blockchain environment.
The second filing focuses on the existing BlackRock Select Treasury Based Liquidity Fund, which already manages nearly $7 billion. BlackRock proposes creating a new share class for this fund where BNY Mellon Investment Servicing would maintain the official shareholder registry on Ethereum using ERC-20 tokens.
That second filing is arguably more significant. It takes one of BlackRock’s largest existing cash-management products and places its ownership records directly on a public blockchain for the first time.
Why This Matters
To understand the significance, consider what BlackRock is actually saying with these filings.
A money-market fund is one of the most conservative, vanilla products in all of finance. It’s where institutions park cash when they want safety, liquidity, and a small return. Pension funds, corporate treasuries, and government agencies use them. They’re about as exciting as watching paint dry.
BlackRock is now saying that even these boring, conservative products belong on blockchain. Not crypto-native DeFi. Not speculative tokens. The bread and butter of institutional cash management.
If blockchain is good enough for BlackRock’s money-market funds, the argument that tokenisation is “just a crypto thing” effectively dies. This is the world’s most important asset manager signalling that blockchain-based ownership records, 24/7 transferability, and programmable finance are the future of how all financial products will operate.
Building on BUIDL’s Success
These filings don’t come out of nowhere. BlackRock has been building its tokenisation infrastructure methodically since 2024.
The company’s first major move was launching the BlackRock USD Institutional Digital Liquidity Fund, known by its ticker BUIDL, in March 2024 on Ethereum through Securitize. BUIDL became the largest tokenised fund in the world by assets under management in less than 40 days.
Since then, BlackRock has expanded BUIDL’s reach across multiple blockchain ecosystems, launching share classes on Aptos, Arbitrum, Avalanche, Optimism, and Polygon. Each new blockchain allows its ecosystem of applications and users to interact natively with BUIDL, enabling on-chain yield with flexible custody, near real-time transfers around the clock, and on-chain dividend accrual.
The two new filings represent the next step in that evolution. The stablecoin reserve vehicle is designed specifically for participants in the stablecoin ecosystem who need a regulated, yield-bearing instrument that lives entirely on-chain. The money-market fund share class brings one of the most widely used traditional financial products onto blockchain for the first time.
The Tokenisation Market Is Exploding
BlackRock’s timing isn’t accidental. The tokenised real-world asset market has tripled in the past year.
Tokenised US Treasuries alone have crossed $14 billion in total value as of May 2026. The broader RWA market, which includes bonds, real estate, commodities, and private credit, has surpassed $30 billion. Boston Consulting Group projects the total market could reach $16 trillion by 2030.
The institutional players piling in read like a list of the world’s financial establishment. JPMorgan settled tokenised Treasuries cross-border in under five seconds this week. The DTCC announced it will launch a tokenised securities platform in October with input from over 50 firms including Goldman Sachs and Circle. Nasdaq is preparing for tokenised stock and ETF trading. BNY Mellon, the world’s largest custodian, is now serving as the transfer agent for BlackRock’s on-chain share class.
Ethereum currently holds more than half of the tokenised Treasury market, approximately $8 billion. That position is likely to strengthen as BlackRock’s new products bring additional billions onto the network.
What This Means for Ethereum
For Ethereum, BlackRock’s filings are a significant validation at a time when the network needs positive catalysts.
ETH has been underperforming Bitcoin throughout 2026, with its market dominance slipping to around 10.4%. The ETH/BTC ratio remains at multi-year lows. Competition from Solana, Base, and other faster networks has drawn developers and users away from Ethereum’s main chain.
But tokenisation is one area where Ethereum’s advantages remain clear. The network’s security, decentralisation, established infrastructure, and regulatory familiarity make it the natural home for institutional-grade financial products. When BNY Mellon maintains shareholder records on Ethereum for BlackRock’s $7 billion fund, it reinforces Ethereum’s position as the settlement layer that traditional finance trusts most.
The upcoming Glamsterdam upgrade, which targets parallel transaction processing and significantly higher throughput, could further strengthen Ethereum’s case for institutional adoption. If the network can handle more transactions at lower cost while maintaining its security guarantees, the volume of tokenised assets it supports could grow substantially.
For ETH’s price, the impact is indirect but real. More institutional products on Ethereum means more demand for block space, more fees burned, and more reasons for large allocators to hold ETH as a core portfolio asset.
The Bottom Line
Two SEC filings from BlackRock in a single day, both tied to Ethereum, both pushing tokenised Treasury products deeper into blockchain infrastructure. That’s not an experiment. That’s a strategy.
The message from the world’s largest asset manager is clear. Blockchain-based ownership, 24/7 transferability, and programmable finance are coming to the most fundamental products in institutional cash management. And Ethereum is where they’re building it.
For the crypto industry, this is the adoption story that matters most. Not meme coins. Not speculative pumps. The slow, steady migration of trillions of dollars in traditional financial products onto blockchain rails, led by the most powerful institutions in global finance.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Cryptocurrency investments carry significant risk. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.

















