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Nasdaq Partners with Talos to Advance Tokenized Collateral Management

Simon Simba
Simon Simba
Simon is a writer with five years experience in crypto and iGaming. He currently works as a freelance writer at BanklessTimes where he focuses on simplifying daily crypto developments for readers. He discovered crypto in 2022 while writing news about NFTs for a news website in the US, and has since written for two other international NFT projects, and a Web3 gaming agency.
Updated: March 23rd, 2026

Nasdaq has teamed up with digital asset platform Talos. They plan to build a shared system for tokenized collateral. This system will work across traditional and crypto markets.

The partnership links Talos’ infrastructure to Nasdaq’s Calypso platform. It also connects Talos to Nasdaq’s Trade Surveillance tools. Big banks and funds already use these platforms to manage risk and collateral.

How the Nasdaq–Talos Integration Works

Talos provides institutional tools for trading, valuing, and settling digital assets from front office through back office. Nasdaq Calypso is a widely used platform for managing risk, margin, and collateral across bonds, equities, derivatives, and other mainstream assets. By connecting the two, the firms want to give institutions one place to manage both on-chain and off-chain collateral flows.

The combined setup will let firms move tokenized assets alongside traditional collateral while using the same risk and margin tools. Talos clients will also gain access to Nasdaq Trade Surveillance, which monitors markets for abuse patterns such as spoofing, layering, and wash trading. This means trades done through Talos can be watched with the same compliance tools that large exchanges already use.

Why Nasdaq Wants Tokenized Collateral

Nasdaq says tokenization can make collateral more mobile and more efficient for banks, brokers, and asset managers. In a recent analysis, the exchange group estimated that about 25 percent of collateral sits tied up in corrective or non-interest-bearing accounts, worth more than $35 billion globally. This idle capital often reflects operational delays, settlement frictions, and fragmented systems between cash, securities, and derivatives desks.

Tokenized collateral turns traditional assets such as government bonds or funds into digital tokens on distributed ledgers. These tokens can in theory move and settle closer to real time, freeing up margin and making it easier to meet calls across multiple venues. Nasdaq argues that the missing piece is integration with existing risk and collateral workflows, which this deal with Talos aims to address.

For banks and trading firms, the partnership offers a way to test tokenized collateral without abandoning current systems. They will be able to manage digital assets and traditional securities under one risk view and one set of controls. Talos says clients will connect execution, risk, collateral, and compliance workflows across on-chain and off-chain assets, which could cut operational friction.

For crypto markets, the move is another sign that large market operators see long-term demand for tokenized versions of mainstream assets. 

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Simon Simba
Simon is a writer with five years experience in crypto and iGaming. He currently works as a freelance writer at BanklessTimes where he focuses on simplifying daily crypto developments for readers. He discovered crypto in 2022 while writing news about NFTs for a news website in the US, and has since written for two other international NFT projects, and a Web3 gaming agency.