Dinari Tokenized Stocks Approval: Can UAE’s Tokenization Ambitions Keep Up?

Dinari’s approval last week as the first U.S. broker-dealer authorized to offer tokenized stocks marks a global turning point. Dinari tokenized stocks are now regulated in the world’s largest capital market, proving that tokenization is no longer just an innovative concept – it is becoming mainstream.
For the UAE, this comes at a defining moment for its tokenization strategy.
Real estate tokenization: strong headlines, shallow markets
The UAE has taken bold steps in tokenized real estate, with Dubai Land Department’s partnership with CTRL-AL to tokenize property titles showing clear ambition. Similarly, VARA’s ARVA Rulebook lays out a comprehensive framework for tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) in Dubai.
Yet despite these announcements, real estate tokenization in the UAE is still in its infancy. Platforms exist, but true market depth is lacking. There are no active secondary markets with institutional liquidity, and tokenized assets remain confined within pilot-scale ecosystems.
Why Dinari tokenized stocks change the game
Dinari’s approval shows that tokenized equities backed by US capital markets are now legally live. Apple, Tesla, and S&P500 companies can be traded as tokens within a regulated US broker-dealer framework. This brings instant depth, brand trust, and institutional-grade market structure.
It proves a core reality: tokenization needs depth to thrive, and today, that depth exists in the US market more than anywhere else.
UAE’s crossroads: complement or compete?
The UAE has positioned itself as a global hub for tokenization, but Dinari tokenized stocks pose a critical question: Can the UAE keep up with this regulatory and market momentum, or will it become an importer of tokenized products rather than a leader shaping their global future?
The path forward lies in:
- Fast regulatory response: VARA and ADGM must enable seamless integration of US tokenized stocks into local offerings without friction or legal ambiguity.
- Innovative local execution: UAE banks, brokers, and tokenization platforms must not only focus on tokenized real estate but also integrate global tokenized equities and RWAs to create multi-asset marketplaces.
- Depth-building strategies: Beyond pilots, UAE players must attract real institutional liquidity, whether in tokenized real estate or US equities, to transform tokenization from showcase technology to mainstream finance.
Where does this leave the UAE?
Dinari is the first of many US tokenization approvals. The UAE still holds advantages in agility, vision, and its unique position bridging East and West. But without fast execution and market depth, it risks being overtaken by the very markets it hoped to lead.
Dinari tokenized stocks show that tokenization’s next chapter is no longer about technology alone. It is about regulatory readiness, liquidity, and strategic integration. The US has fired the first shot. The question is whether the UAE will respond with equal speed and ambition.