Invesco Files for Tokenized Stablecoin Reserve Fund as Market Could Reach $4 Trillion by 2030
Updated
Updated · CoinDesk · Jun 25
Invesco Files for Tokenized Stablecoin Reserve Fund as Market Could Reach $4 Trillion by 2030
3 articles · Updated · CoinDesk · Jun 25
Summary
Invesco filed with the SEC to launch the Invesco Stablecoin Reserves Onchain Fund, a tokenized vehicle that would hold cash and short-term U.S. Treasuries backing stablecoins.
The proposed fund would run on a public blockchain and use Superstate as sub-transfer agent, with a blockchain-integrated shareholder registry and on-chain tokens representing ownership.
Its portfolio is designed to match GENIUS Act reserve requirements for U.S. payment stablecoins, positioning Invesco for a fast-growing market tied to digital dollars.
Citi estimates the stablecoin market could grow to $4 trillion by 2030 from about $300 billion today, drawing BlackRock, State Street and ProShares into the same reserve-fund race.
The filing extends Invesco's broader tokenization push after it earlier took over management of Superstate's roughly $900 million tokenized Treasury fund.
As Wall Street giants tokenize trillions in assets, who will ultimately control the new financial system?
Are tokenized treasury funds a tech upgrade or a fundamental shift in how global capital will operate?
Invesco’s $2.2 Trillion Push: How Tokenized Stablecoin Reserve Funds Are Reshaping U.S. Finance in 2026
Overview
On June 25, 2026, Invesco filed an SEC registration for the 'Invesco Stablecoin Reserves Onchain Fund,' signaling its move to integrate traditional finance with blockchain technology. The fund is designed to serve as a reserve vehicle for stablecoins and will operate on a public blockchain, though it is not yet live and remains subject to regulatory approval. Invesco can amend or withdraw the filing before it becomes effective, and the fund could launch in as little as 60 days if the SEC does not intervene. This step highlights Invesco’s commitment to tokenization amid an evolving regulatory environment.