Apple's tokenized stock scores 83 out of 100 on the Realmint Score. Tesla scores 83. Nvidia, Microsoft, Coinbase, and the S&P 500 tracker all land on 82. Across the most actively traded tokenized stocks, the entire range is three points — and that near-tie is the most useful thing the score tells you.
All 140 tokenized stocks on Realmint are xStocks, issued by the same company — Backed Assets (JE) Limited — and wrapped the same way on Solana. So the highest-scored tokenized stocks aren't separated by the business behind the ticker. They're separated by one thing: how liquid the token is.
Highest-scored tokenized stocks — as of 14 Jul 2026
Why do the top tokenized stocks all score about the same?
Because they're the same product with a different ticker. Every xStock is a tracker certificate issued by Backed Assets (JE) Limited, a Jersey SPV, under one FMA-approved base prospectus — same issuer, same legal structure, same custodians, same Solana Token-2022 contract. On four of the Realmint Score's six dimensions, that produces an identical number for every single name:
- Backing — 90. Each token is 1:1 share-backed, held with regulated custodians, with proof-of-reserves published and quarterly ISAE 3000 assurance audits by Grant Thornton.
- Enforceability — 80. Governing law is Jersey, and the certificate is redeemable against the issuer through an investor put option.
- Control — 25. Low, and the same for all of them — more on that below.
- Social — 100. The xStocks brand account is verified and active: 77,000+ followers, last post within the week.
Exit sits at 74 across the board too — redemption exists, but it carries a $5,000 primary-market minimum, KYC, a 0.50% fee, and T+5 settlement. That leaves exactly one dimension free to move the composite: liquidity.
What actually separates them? Liquidity.
Liquidity is the only score that changes from one xStock to the next, so it decides the ranking. Apple and Tesla score 90 on liquidity and top the table at 83. The rest of the majors — Nvidia, Microsoft, the S&P 500 tracker, Coinbase, Meta — score 85 and land on 82. The gap is real but small, because all of them clear the bar for a functioning market.
The drop-off is at the thin end of the catalog. Brera (SLMTx), an obscure name with almost no on-chain trading, scores 30 on liquidity and 44 on exit — dragging its composite down to 63. Same 90 backing, same issuer, same legal documents as Apple. A 20-point composite gap, driven almost entirely by the risk that you can't sell it at a fair price.
The spread is all liquidity
What does a control score of 25 mean?
On Realmint's control axis, higher is better: it measures how little unilateral power the issuer keeps over your token. xStocks score 25, near the bottom — and that number is the ceiling on the whole category. Backed's Solana contract carries freeze, mint, burn, and blacklist authority, plus a permanent-delegate authority that can move tokens out of any wallet. It's there for compliance, but the power is real.
That's why even a tokenized stock with flawless 90 backing tops out in the low 80s, and it's the reason to read the score dimension by dimension rather than trusting the headline number — a framework we walk through in how to evaluate any tokenized asset.
PAXG, tokenized gold from Paxos, scores 90 — higher than any xStock on the platform. The difference isn't backing; it's the issuer-control profile and market structure. See what is PAXG for the contrast.
So which tokenized stock should you buy?
The Realmint Score won't pick a company for you — Apple versus Nvidia versus the S&P 500 is your call. What it says is narrower and clearer: among tokenized stocks, choose the most liquid version of the exposure you want, and go in knowing every xStock carries the same 25/100 issuer-control tradeoff. If a name scores well below the low-80s cluster, that's almost always a liquidity warning — not a cheaper entry into the same asset.
And you're not buying Apple stock. You're buying a Jersey-law tracker certificate, with no voting or dividend rights, that references Apple's price — which we break down in what you actually own with xStocks.
Apple xStock (AAPLx) scores 83/100 — the top of the tokenized-stock range. See the full six-dimension breakdown, live price, and due diligence.
See Apple xStock on RealmintThis article is educational, not investment advice. Scores and prices are as of 14 July 2026 (Realmint Score model 2026-05-06a) and change over time; tokenized stocks carry issuer, market, and regulatory risk. Do your own research before buying.