Tokenized Stocks 101: When the World's 7+3 Most Valuable Companies Become Crypto's Underlying Assets

By: WEEX|2026-04-30 10:00:00
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The trend of tokenizing U.S. stocks is unstoppable: U.S. stocks and related ETFs are being extensively tokenized, allowing users to freely buy and sell these “tokenized stocks” on-chain, enabling 24/7 trading, low barriers to entry, and highly combinable on-chain asset allocation.

Among all tokenized U.S. stock assets, the most liquid and most representative of the “U.S. stock market ethos” are the seven tech giants known as the “Magnificent Seven”—Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT), NVIDIA (NVDA), Amazon (AMZN), Google’s parent company Alphabet (GOOGL), Meta (META), and Tesla (TSLA).

They account for over 80% of the volatility in the U.S. stock market.

In today’s guide, we’ll explore the overall structure of the U.S. stock market, the business evolution of the Magnificent Seven, and finally discuss how three upcoming “rising stars” set to go public will reshape the market.

I. The U.S. Stock Market: A Bull Market Dominated by the “Magnificent Seven”

The U.S. stock market, benchmarked by the S&P 500 Index, has a total market capitalization exceeding $50 trillion, but it is highly concentrated among tech giants. As of April 2026, the “Seven Sisters” collectively accounted for approximately 33.7% of the S&P 500’s weighting (up from just 12.5% in 2016), with a combined market capitalization of about $20 trillion. The top 10 stocks sometimes account for nearly 40% of the index.

Simply put: buying an S&P 500 ETF ≈ buying the “Seven Sisters.”

For ordinary investors, a straightforward question arises: what does this actually mean? The most intuitive answer is that whether you make money or not depends largely on these seven companies.

This structure gives rise to the typical “long bull, short bear” characteristic of the U.S. stock market:

  1. Dual-engine growth driven by earnings and buybacks: These giants consistently maintain free cash flow profit margins of 15%+, combined with annual stock buybacks in the hundreds of billions of dollars, creating a structural bull market characterized by “a floor on the downside and leverage on the upside.”
  2. Highly simplified macro-level pricing: The Fed’s interest rate path determines the denominator of valuations, the pace of AI commercialization determines the numerator of earnings, and global dollar liquidity determines market elasticity.
  3. Bear markets feature “sharp declines and gradual recoveries”: When macroeconomic headwinds or liquidity tightening occur, indices typically experience a rapid 10%–15% pullback within 1–3 months. However, passive fund allocations and institutional bottom-fishing quickly restore the upward trend, with bear market cycles generally lasting no longer than six months.

For on-chain investors, understanding this structure implies that trading U.S. RWA essentially involves trading the discounted cash flows of a few core assets and macro liquidity premiums. If systemic volatility occurs in the broader market, on-chain prices typically revert to their anchored levels within 1–3 minutes through arbitrage mechanisms.

II. A Detailed Breakdown: The Deep Integration of the “Seven Sisters” and AI

1. NVIDIA—The Computing Power Provider of the AI Era

NVIDIA is the world’s highest-valued publicly traded company and the investment with the fastest profit growth, the most direct benefits, and the greatest certainty in the current AI wave. It is also closely tied to the AI sector of the cryptocurrency market.

- Main Business: GPU chips, with the data center business accounting for approximately 91% of the company’s total revenue.

- Market Capitalization: Approximately $5.09 trillion as of the end of April 2026, with a weighting of about 7.85% in the S&P 500.

- Performance: GPUs based on the Blackwell architecture hold a near-monopoly in the global AI training sector. CEO Jensen Huang has publicly stated that the company’s market capitalization could reach $10 trillion in the future.

Click to Trade NVDAON/USDT

2 Apple — Consumer Hardware × Service Ecosystem Empire

Apple is the world’s second-largest company by market capitalization. Its core business consists of the iPhone, a “super product,” coupled with a service ecosystem spanning over 2.5 billion active devices.

- Main Business: iPhone sales + monetization of the service ecosystem (App Store, Apple Music, iCloud, etc.).

- Market Cap: Approximately $3.97 trillion as of the end of April 2026, with a weighting of about 6.12%.

- Performance: Q1 FY2026 revenue of $143.8 billion, up 16% year-over-year; EPS of $2.84, up 19% year-over-year, exceeding expectations across the board. Services revenue surpassed $30 billion for the first time.

Click to Trade AAPLON/USDT

3. Microsoft — The “Shovel Seller” of Cloud Computing × AI

Microsoft has transformed from a traditional software company selling Windows and Office into a cloud computing and AI integration giant centered on Azure cloud services.

- Core Businesses: Azure cloud services + Copilot AI office assistant + enterprise software.

- Market Cap: Approximately $3.15 trillion as of the end of April 2026, with a weighting of about 4.86%.

- Financial Results: Q3 FY2026 revenue of $82.9 billion (up 18% YoY), EPS of $4.27 (exceeded expectations); Microsoft Cloud revenue: $54.5 billion (up 29% YoY); annualized AI revenue run rate exceeded $37 billion (up 123%). Demand for AI Copilot and Azure remains strong, but AI investments have put slight pressure on gross margins.

Click to Trade MSFTON/USDT

4 Amazon — E-commerce Empire × Cloud Computing King

Amazon is the most diversified of the “Big Seven,” but its true profit engines are AWS (cloud computing) and advertising.

- Core Businesses: E-commerce (traffic base) + AWS Cloud (profit core) + Advertising (fastest-growing major business).

- Market Cap: Approximately $2.83 trillion as of the end of April 2026, with a weighting of about 4.37%.

- Financial Results: Q1 2026 revenue of $181.5 billion (up 17% YoY), EPS of $2.78 (beat expectations); AWS cloud business revenue of $37.6 billion (up 28% YoY, the fastest growth in 15 quarters). AWS accounts for only about 17–18% of total revenue but contributes over 60% of operating profit; Annualized revenue from the advertising business has exceeded $70 billion, with growth exceeding 20%.

Click to Trade AMZNON/USDT

  1. Alphabet, Google’s Parent Company—The “Trio” of Search × AI × Cloud

Alphabet holds nearly 90% of the global search engine market share, while also owning Google Cloud, the world’s third-largest cloud platform, and DeepMind, the leading AI research organization.

  • Core Businesses: Search Advertising (Cash Cow) + Google Cloud (Rapid Growth) + AI Business.
  • Market Cap: Approximately $4.20 trillion combined, with a combined weighting of about 6.51%.
  • Performance: Q1 2026 revenue of $109.9 billion (up 22% YoY), EPS of $5.11 (significantly beating expectations); Google Cloud revenue of $20.0 billion (up 63%).

Click to trade GOOGLON/USDT

6 Meta — The AI Advertising Machine of Social Media

After navigating the “metaverse slump” of 2022, Meta staged a strong rebound in 2025 driven by AI advertising.

  • Core Business: Social media advertising across the Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp ecosystem.
  • Market Cap: Approximately $1.70 trillion as of the end of April 2026, with a weighting of about 2.62%.
  • Performance: Daily active users (across the entire suite) reached 3.58 billion, continuing to grow even at this massive scale. Annualized revenue from the AI advertising automation tool Advantage+ has reached $60 billion, with AI-driven ad impressions growing by 18% and average ad prices rising by 6%.

Trade METAON/USDT

  1. Tesla — The Narrative King: From Selling Cars to Selling the “Future”

Tesla is the most unique of the “Seven Sisters”—there is a significant tension between its actual financial performance (car sales) and its capital market narrative (autonomous driving + robotics).

  • Core Businesses: Electric vehicle manufacturing + energy storage + Full Self-Driving (FSD) system + Optimus robot.
  • Market Cap: Approximately $1.40 trillion as of the end of April 2026, with a weighting of about 2.1% .
  • Performance: 2025 marked the first full-year revenue decline, down approximately 3%; the market is watching for signs of recovery following persistently weak delivery numbers.

Click to Trade TSLAON/USDT

It is worth noting that the Q1 2026 earnings season has reached its peak—on April 29–30, Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft, and Meta reported strong results, with Apple following suit the next day. The short-term impact of these earnings reports on stock prices is evident. However, overall, the “Big Seven” are expected to see total Q1 earnings grow by approximately 14.5% to 20.3% year-over-year, remaining the primary drivers of overall earnings growth for the S&P 500.

Further Reading: RWA Eco Week: Share $60,000!

III. A New Variable Deserves Close Attention: The Three Mega IPOs of 2026

The landscape of the “Seven Sisters” is not set in stone. In 2026, three of the largest private tech companies in history are lining up for IPOs—once they go public, they may not only redefine the “Seven Sisters” but also bring about a systemic disruption to the liquidity structure of global capital markets.

We previously discussed this in our article, “How the Three Most Valuable IPOs of 2026 Will Ignite a New RWA Narrative?”:

  1. SpaceX — The Space Economy

Launch missions and Starlink (satellite internet) account for the vast majority of revenue, with combined revenue for these two businesses projected to exceed $20 billion in 2026. SpaceX has quietly filed for an IPO, planning to go public around June 2026, with its target valuation raised from an earlier $1.75 trillion to over $2 trillion.

  1. OpenAI — The King of AI Applications, Parent Company of ChatGPT

As the pioneer of generative AI, OpenAI’s annualized revenue has surged to $25 billion. OpenAI plans to go public as early as the fourth quarter of 2026, with a target valuation of approximately $1 trillion.

  1. Anthropic — AI Safety Company, Developer of the Claude Model

As OpenAI’s main rival, Anthropic positions itself as a provider of “safe and reliable AI.” It has attracted significant investment from Amazon and Google, with a valuation pegged at $350 billion, making it a darling of the enterprise AI market. Anthropic is considering an IPO as early as October of this year, targeting a valuation of approximately $900 billion.

However, all three of these soon-to-be-listed companies are currently operating at a loss. Under the S&P 500’s inclusion criteria (which require four consecutive quarters of profitability), they cannot be passively included in major indices in the short term, meaning they lack the automatic buying support from trillions of dollars in passive investment funds.

SpaceX’s strategy is to list on the Nasdaq and seek inclusion in the Nasdaq-100 index as soon as possible. Nasdaq, for its part, is proposing new rules to help large-cap new companies like SpaceX gain rapid index inclusion. Once included in the NASDAQ-100 Index, SpaceX’s stock would directly enter the investment universe of passive funds and ETFs, attracting substantial holdings from both institutional passive investors and retail investors.

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IV. Conclusion: Investment Considerations Following the On-Chain Integration of U.S. Stocks

With the entry of top-tier institutions like Nasdaq and the NYSE, RWA is transitioning from a niche narrative to a core topic in mainstream finance. The RWA tokenization products from the “Seven Sisters” serve as the best “ambassadors” for this trend, providing the crypto industry with compelling arguments to persuade mainstream investors.

It is foreseeable that the combination of tokenization and DeFi composability will give rise to entirely new financial scenarios, such as pre-IPO subscription trading, hedging, yield aggregation, collateralized lending, and arbitrage strategies. On-chain stocks will evolve from mere trading instruments into a full layer of financial infrastructure.

Although the integration of cryptocurrencies and RWA is deepening, leading to occasional convergence in price performance, fundamental and technical analysis of the stock market may still differ from that of cryptocurrencies. When purchasing tokenized stocks on-chain, users must still ask themselves the same questions they would in a traditional brokerage account:

What is this company actually worth? Is the current price undervalued?

As the Q1 2026 earnings season unfolds and the countdown begins for three of the largest IPOs in history, the market is rewriting these answers one by one—and we will continue to follow the story.

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