TL;DR:
- Tokenized ETFs reached $441.9 million across 651 products, six issuers and eight blockchains, equal to only 0.0022% of the $20 trillion global ETF industry.
- Ethereum holds $321.0 million, or 72.6% of value, while Ondo Finance controls $330.9 million and 74.9% issuer share.
- Top assets IVVon, IBITon, SPYon and QQQon show the market is tokenizing familiar ETF exposures first, not creating new crypto-native fund structures at scale for investors globally today.
Tokenized ETFs have reached $441.9 million in market capitalization across 651 products, six issuers and eight blockchains, giving the onchain fund market a measurable footprint while still leaving it tiny beside the $20 trillion global ETF industry. Ethereum dominates the category with $321.0 million, or 72.6% of total value. That scale is impressive and almost absurdly early at once. For asset managers, the market is now visible but barely penetrated, representing only 0.0022% of the traditional ETF universe and forcing a sober read on growth.
BREAKING: @ethereum hosts 72.6% of all tokenized ETFs.
The global ETF market is at ~$20 trillion today, with only $441.9 million tokenized so far.
Assets, issuers, and chains to follow š pic.twitter.com/z4sKtKBhNG
— Token Terminal š (@tokenterminal) May 17, 2026
Ethereumās Lead Mirrors Issuer Concentration
The concentration is not only technical. Ondo Finance controls $330.9 million, equal to 74.9% of issuer share, while xStocks follows with $63.8 million and 14.4%. WisdomTree sits third at $25.5 million and 5.8%, with Dinari, Robinhood and Backed Finance sharing the remaining 5%. On the chain side, Solana holds $55.3 million, Stellar $25.5 million, BNB Chain $22.4 million and Arbitrum One $17.5 million. Ethereumās lead is effectively tied to Ondoās deployment strategy, making chain dominance and issuer dominance two sides of one concentrated structure.
The largest products also show how cautious the market remains. IVVon leads with $67.3 million, followed by IBITon at $43.8 million and SPYon at $41.7 million. QQQon adds another $39.3 million, extending a pattern built around recognizable ETF demand. These are tokenized versions of familiar traditional products, not experimental crypto-native fund structures or entirely new asset categories. In practical terms, tokenized ETFs are replicating proven demand first, reducing adoption risk while limiting the category to investors who already understand the underlying exposures and want familiar wrappers onchain.
That creates the central paradox. The market has grown by about 17,000% in a year, yet its total value remains almost invisible relative to traditional ETFs. Even repeated doublings would leave penetration low for some time. The next signal will be whether new issuers can reduce Ondoās share below todayās heavy concentration while total market cap moves beyond $2 billion. The categoryās growth story depends on breadth, because scaling within one issuer and one dominant chain would prove demand, but not yet a diversified market structure with resilient competition, deeper liquidity and clearer institutional participation. That distinction will matter as tokenized funds try to move from proof of concept into mainstream portfolio infrastructure during the next market cycle globally.






