Hamilton Lane has launched its tokenized Senior Credit Opportunities Fund, HLSCOPE, on the Tron blockchain, expanding a regulated private credit product onto one of the world’s busiest public ledgers. The move follows the dismissal of a high‑profile U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) case involving Tron founder Justin Sun and affiliated entities, clearing a key hurdle for U.S. digital asset firms to build on the network.
Fund details and performance
HLSCOPE is a tokenized feeder fund that provides onchain access to Hamilton Lane’s traditional Senior Credit Opportunities Fund. The underlying strategy focuses mainly on senior secured loans to large corporate borrowers in North America and Europe.
According to Securitize data, the onchain HLSCOPE fund currently manages about $4.28 million in assets and is advertising an annual return of 5.87%.
Originally launched in 2023, HLSCOPE is structured to give qualified market participants exposure to private credit through blockchain rails, a segment typically reserved for large institutions.
Multi-chain expansion and Tron integration
Before the Tron deployment, HLSCOPE was already live on Ethereum, Polygon, Plume, and Optimism. Asset mobility is supported by the cross‑chain protocol Wormhole, allowing traders to move fund tokens across supported networks.
The integration with Tron both broadens HLSCOPE’s reach and introduces Securitize’s first tokenized asset on the Tron network. Tron hosts roughly 383 million accounts and has established itself as a leading chain for stablecoin activity.
By going live on Tron, HLSCOPE now sits on infrastructure built for high‑throughput, low‑cost transactions, potentially aligning a yield‑generating private credit product with an ecosystem dominated by frequent payments and transfers.
Regulatory backdrop: SEC case dismissed
The expansion comes soon after the SEC formally ended its enforcement action against Sun, the Tron Foundation, and the BitTorrent Foundation. The regulator dismissed its claims with prejudice, meaning it cannot refile the same allegations.
The SEC’s original complaint, filed in March 2023, alleged unregistered securities offerings involving TRX and BTT tokens, undisclosed celebrity promotions, and market manipulation through wash trading.
As part of the resolution, Rainberry Inc., parent of the BitTorrent network, agreed to pay a $10 million civil penalty. The company did so without admitting or denying the allegations related to wash trading. While Rainberry accepted the penalty, the dismissal of claims against Sun and the foundations removed a significant layer of legal uncertainty surrounding Tron for U.S.-based firms.
Shift in U.S. market stance toward Tron
With the case closed, U.S. digital asset platforms have begun adding Tron back into product lineups after years of regulatory hesitation. Securitize’s move to launch HLSCOPE on Tron is one of the more notable examples, given its focus on regulated, tokenized private market assets.
The integration effectively introduces institutional‑grade private credit exposure to a network better known for its role in global stablecoin flows.
Tron’s scale in stablecoin activity
Tron has developed into a dominant venue for stablecoin usage. The network supports a large base of over 383 million total accounts and hosts a substantial portion of global stablecoin circulation, recently nearing $90 billion in total supply.
In the first quarter of 2026, Tron processed an estimated $1.96 trillion in stablecoin settlement volume. Daily transfer volumes for USDT on Tron have recently averaged close to $20 billion, illustrating the chain’s capacity for large‑scale value transfer.
This transaction profile positions Tron as a high‑throughput settlement layer, which now is being tested for hosting more complex tokenized financial products.
Strategic implications for tokenized private credit
Placing a tokenized private credit fund on a chain optimized for fast, low‑cost payments is a notable step in the evolution of real‑world assets on public blockchains. HLSCOPE offers an income‑oriented product inside an ecosystem where activity has historically been centered on stablecoin transfers and utility tokens.
Market participants will be watching whether Tron’s user base allocates meaningful capital into HLSCOPE in the coming weeks and months. Flows into the fund on Tron will serve as an early gauge of appetite for tokenized real‑world assets on high‑volume networks.
What comes next for asset managers and real-world assets
The adoption curve for HLSCOPE on Tron may act as a test case for other asset managers assessing whether to bring private credit and other real‑world asset strategies onto similar chains.
Key questions for the market include:
- whether tokenized credit strategies can gain traction on networks historically dominated by payment tokens and stablecoins
- how cross‑chain mechanisms like Wormhole impact liquidity and pricing of fund tokens
- whether other established managers follow Hamilton Lane’s lead and list products on Tron or comparable high‑throughput blockchains
If early demand proves resilient, the HLSCOPE launch could signal a broader shift, with more regulated, yield‑bearing traditional assets migrating onto public ledgers that have, until now, been used mainly for transactional throughput rather than institutional‑style credit exposure.
Explore how tokenized private credit is reshaping institutional finance beyond Hamilton Lane’s HLSCOPE launch on Tron.
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