On 18 May 2026, the Malta Financial Services Authority (MFSA) published a consultation paper on the tokenisation of financial instruments and real-world assets (RWAs), inviting industry feedback on the legal, regulatory, and operational dimensions of tokenisation. The consultation aims to inform the development of a future policy framework and identifying the asset class most suitable for Malta’s first tokenisation pilot.
Background and Context
Tokenisation refers to the digital representation of ownership rights in assets through distributed ledger technology (DLT), enabling issuance, trading, settlement, and record-keeping on blockchain-based infrastructure. International and European developments, including the EU DLT Pilot Regime and global initiatives such as Project Guardian, demonstrate accelerating institutional adoption of tokenisation., which is widely viewed as a potential enabler of enhanced market efficiency, transparency, automation, financial inclusion, and cross-border market access.
Objectives and Consultation Questions
Through this consultation, the MFSA aims to assess industry interest in tokenised instruments, identify the asset class most suitable for Malta’s first tokenisation pilot, and gain a clear understanding of existing infrastructure capabilities, regulatory considerations, and potential operational barriers. In particular, the MFSA seeks to determine whether tokenisation may be implemented within existing EU legislative frameworks through the technology-neutral principle, or whether targeted interpretative guidance, national measures, or EU-level regulatory developments may be required. The consultation poses sixteen questions spanning six thematic areas.
Legal and Regulatory Analysis
A Welcome Initiative
The MFSA’s consultation is a strategically sound step. Malta has historically positioned itself as an early mover in digital finance, and this paper signals a continued ambition to remain at the frontier of financial innovation. That said, it is an exploratory discussion document rather than a concrete legislative proposal. It raises the right questions but stops short of providing answers. The breadth of sixteen questions risks producing feedback that is too diffuse to translate into actionable policy.
The Technology-Neutral Principle: Necessary but Insufficient
A central question the MFSA seeks to resolve is whether tokenisation may be implemented within existing EU legislative frameworks through the technology-neutral principle. Whilst conceptually sound, applying this principle to tokenisation is far from straightforward. Frameworks such as MiFID II, the Central Securities Depositories Regulation (CSDR), and the Settlement Finality Directive were designed with traditional market infrastructure in mind. Mapping DLT-native settlement and custody arrangements onto these texts requires significant interpretive effort. Moreover, the DLT Pilot Regime itself (an admitted carve-out from standard rules) demonstrates that the principle alone is insufficient for systemic-scale tokenisation. The MFSA’s reliance on it, without simultaneously proposing concrete interpretive guidance, may prove inadequate in practice.
The Real-World Asset Classification Problem
It is important to assess the extent to which the fractionalisation of real-world assets would cause these products to qualify as financial instruments. This is not merely a taxonomic exercise: the answer determines the entire regulatory perimeter governing the product. If fractionalised real estate or commodity tokens meet the criteria of a transferable security or collective investment scheme unit under MiFID II, the full suite of prospectus, authorisation, and conduct-of-business requirements would apply. The consultation proposes no test or methodology for making this determination, which represents a notable gap given the real legal uncertainty operators currently face.
Smart Contract Enforceability: An Unresolved Frontier
The enforceability of smart contract terms, particularly in cross-border situations where governing law is uncertain, remains an open legal question. The interaction between self-executing code and established contract law principles (offer, acceptance, consideration, and capacity) has not been authoritatively resolved in most EU Member States. In cross-border tokenised transactions, choice-of-law clauses embedded in smart contracts may be legally ineffective or difficult to enforce before national courts. A formal legal opinion, rather than an open consultation question, would be the more effective approach here.
Regulatory Overlap Between MiCA and MiFID II
The MFSA seeks feedback on the role of CASPs, Investment Firms, and other intermediaries in supporting tokenised markets. The potential overlap between the MiCA framework (governing CASPs) and MiFID II (governing Investment Firms) is a particularly acute concern. Where a tokenised instrument qualifies as a financial instrument rather than a crypto-asset under MiCA’s exclusions, a CASP licence will be insufficient. Yet many FinTech operators are structured principally as CASPs. The dual regulatory exposure this creates represents a structural barrier to entry that the consultation identifies but does not address with any concrete mitigation proposal.
AML/CFT: Deserving of Greater Emphasis
Financial crime and AML/CFT risks are identified among the relevant risk categories but receive only limited substantive treatment. The pseudonymous nature of many DLT transactions creates substantial exposure to financial crime. The MFSA should engage more substantively with the Financial Intelligence Analysis Unit (FIAU) and align its approach with the forthcoming EU Anti-Money Laundering Regulation and the establishment of the EU’s Anti-Money Laundering Authority (AMLA), both of which will be directly relevant to tokenised financial services.
Conclusion
The MFSA considers that tokenisation presents a strategic opportunity for Malta’s financial services sector and seeks to ensure that any future policy or regulatory framework is evidence-based, proportionate, technologically neutral, and aligned with Malta’s long-term financial sector strategy. These are admirable objectives. However, for Malta to genuinely lead in this space, the next phase must move beyond question-setting towards concrete regulatory proposals, including targeted national guidance, a defined pilot framework, and a clear articulation of how the MFSA intends to coordinate with EU-level developments. The consultation is a necessary first step, but the legal and regulatory work has only just begun.
Responses are due by 30 June 2026 and should be submitted to [email protected]. If you require our assistance please feel free to contact us on [email protected].

