Polymath to Launch Blockchain Built for Tokenized Stocks
The Polymesh mainnet will go live next month with 14 regulated entities running nodes.

Security token specialist Polymath announced Monday its institutional-grade blockchain built specifically for regulated assets – Polymesh – will go live next month, with a target launch date of Oct. 13.
Announced at Messari’s Mainnet event in New York City, the Polymesh network was designed to iron out the wrinkles encountered when shares in private companies are tokenized on Ethereum, for example. The Polymesh mainnet launch follows about a year of testing, including the last five months on an incentivized testnet with some 4,300 users, the company said.
Polymesh, a standalone blockchain built using Substrate, the same framework Polkadot is built on, will launch with 14 financially regulated entities acting as operators running validator nodes, including the likes of Entoro Capital, Tokenise and the Gibraltar Stock Exchange (GSX).
Stock tokens 2.0
Issuing tokenized assets on blockchains opens up a super-efficient realm of new possibilities. But Ethereum and its ERC-20 token standard weren’t really designed with regulated players in mind, said Graeme Moore, head of tokenization at Polymath. (Back in 2019, Polymath helped spearhead the security token-focused ERC-1400 standard with mechanisms to restrict its usage based on identity, jurisdiction and asset category.)
There are a number of non-starters on Ethereum for regulated companies looking to issue and trade tokenized assets, according to Moore, such as the risk of forks, the need for know-your-customer (KYC) checks, the headache for institutions caused by probabilistic settlement and also the current cost of using the Ethereum mainnet.
“Polymesh has a forkless architecture and also a concept of identity at the base layer, so you have to go through a KYC process,” Moore said in an interview, adding:
“It becomes computationally expensive on Ethereum to do something like restrict Party A from transacting with Party B over a period of time, or just simple transactions like updating a whitelist can cost $100 a day.”
As well as the public launch of the proof-of-stake Polymesh network with its native POLYX token, the startup is also announcing the launch of the Polymesh Association, a non-profit based in Switzerland. The Polymesh Association will be equipped with $8 million and 250 million POLYX to offer for grants and incentives, according to a press release.
Setting up in Switzerland also involved a nod from the country’s markets regulator FINMA, said Moore.
“In Swiss law, I believe you can either be a payment token, a utility token or an asset token,” said Moore. “So we went through FINMA’s whole regulatory regime, and they’ve determined that POLYX is a utility token.”
More For You
Protocol Research: GoPlus Security

What to know:
- As of October 2025, GoPlus has generated $4.7M in total revenue across its product lines. The GoPlus App is the primary revenue driver, contributing $2.5M (approx. 53%), followed by the SafeToken Protocol at $1.7M.
- GoPlus Intelligence's Token Security API averaged 717 million monthly calls year-to-date in 2025 , with a peak of nearly 1 billion calls in February 2025. Total blockchain-level requests, including transaction simulations, averaged an additional 350 million per month.
- Since its January 2025 launch , the $GPS token has registered over $5B in total spot volume and $10B in derivatives volume in 2025. Monthly spot volume peaked in March 2025 at over $1.1B , while derivatives volume peaked the same month at over $4B.
More For You
French Banking Giant BPCE to Roll Out Crypto Trading for 2M Retail Clients

The service will allow customers to buy and sell BTC, ETH, SOL, and USDC through a separate digital asset account managed by Hexarq.
What to know:
- French banking group BPCE will start offering crypto trading services to 2 million retail customers through its Banque Populaire and Caisse d’Épargne apps, with plans to expand to 12 million customers by 2026.
- The service will allow customers to buy and sell BTC, ETH, SOL, and USDC through a separate digital asset account managed by Hexarq, with a €2.99 monthly fee and 1.5% transaction commission.
- The move follows similar initiatives by other European banks, such as BBVA, Santander, and Raiffeisen Bank, which have already started offering crypto trading services to their customers.











