Dinari

  • Name: Dinari
  • URL: https://dinari.com/
  • Category: Tokenized public-securities infrastructure / tokenization API / brokerage-and-wallet integration control plane
  • Tags: ethereum-ecosystem
  • Summary: Dinari is tokenized-securities middleware. The token is the wrapper. The business is onboarding, KYC/KYB, wallet linkage, broker routing into traditional markets, corporate actions, restrictions, and developer access to that machinery.
  • What it does:
    • Issues and manages tokenized public securities through dShares and related tokenized-market products
    • Provides APIs for entity creation, account management, wallet management, KYC workflows, funding flows, and production deployment
    • Exposes stock metadata, price history, quotes, order-placement flows, and hosted-trading options for developer integrations
    • Documents dividends, corporate actions, stock splits, restrictions, fees, taxes/reporting, and dShare bridging/EVM usage so integrators can handle asset lifecycle events properly
    • Publishes official SDKs and MCP-ready developer tooling across multiple languages, making the API surface usable by both developers and AI-assisted workflows
  • Key claims:
    • Dinari’s homepage positions the company as “the leader in tokenized public securities” and says it brings U.S. markets to users across 80 countries with 150+ assets
    • The homepage says Dinari uses “tokenization-on-demand,” where customer orders are placed on traditional financial markets before a token is minted, which is a major clue about the operating model
    • Dinari’s docs cover the full lifecycle around dShares, including wallets, KYC, order placement, stock data, dividends, corporate actions, restrictions, taxes, and deploy-to-production guidance
    • The docs and SDK repos show Dinari offering generated SDKs in TypeScript, Python, Go, and Java, plus an MCP server path for AI-assisted integration
    • The breadth of the docs suggests Dinari is best understood as tokenized-securities and brokerage-integration infrastructure rather than as a simple RWA marketing site or token wrapper
  • Whitepaper: No classic standalone whitepaper or litepaper was found during this pass. The strongest primary materials were Dinari’s official site, docs portal, llms.txt, stock-data and entity-management docs, onboarding/get-started pages, and public SDK repos; see ../whitepapers/dinari-primary-sources-2026-04-26.md.
  • Sources:

Internal linkages

Control surface

  • The useful question is who controls onboarding, broker routing, wallet admission, corporate-action handling, and the mapping between the token and the underlying security claim.

  • That is the whole note. The token matters less than the brokerage and compliance machinery around it.

  • Read Dinari as developer-facing securities operations, not as a magical stock wrapper.

  • Last reviewed: 2026-06-01 UTC