How is the price of an Ondo tokenized stock determined?
Ondo tokenized stocks are designed to be total-return trackers of their underlying securities. This means they reflect both price movements and reinvested dividends and/or interest, giving users exposure to the economic performance of the real stock over time—not just the price appreciation.When you hold an Ondo tokenized stock, you receive similar economic exposure to what you would get if you owned the actual underlying stock and invested its dividends (net of any applicable withholding taxes) into the stock. This ensures that the tokenized asset mirrors the total return of the real-world asset.On Solana and BNB Chain, wallets and explorers that have integrated Scaled UI will display Ondo tokenized stock prices and balances that are intended to more closely match the underlying asset’s price and units. Wallets and explorers that have not integrated Scaled UI will display balances and prices similar to the Ethereum total-return-tracker presentation. This only affects the way in which the prices and balances are displayed; the economic exposure is the same. These display differences do not affect your underlying token holdings; all assets remain the same regardless of the method of display.For more on how corporate actions are handled, read more here.Can you give me an example?
Let’s take a sample stock, ACME, and its corresponding Ondo tokenized stock, ACMEon. At launch, assume they both start at $100 and that you buy one ACMEon token. If the ACME stock goes up by $5 to $105, the ACMEon stock should as well. Similarly, if the stock goes back down $100, the same should be true for the token.Now let’s assume—again, for a simplified example—that ACME stock declares a dividend of $10 per share. On the ex-dividend date (i.e. the cutoff date on or after which whoever acquires the stock is no longer eligible to receive the dividend), we update the price of the token to account for the fact that we’re going to receive that dividend (net of applicable withholding taxes) and invest that money to purchase additional shares of ACME.In this case, for ease of math let’s assume the withholding tax was 50%. This means that we’d receive $10*(1-50%) = $5 from the dividend. If we assume the price of ACME at the time was still $100, that means we would buy $5/$100 = 0.05 additional shares of ACME stock. This means that, from now on (at least until the next dividend or corporate action), a single ACMEon token now actually represents the economics of 1.05 shares of ACME stock. Therefore, if the price of ACME stock was to go from $100 to $110 again, the price of the token would go from 1.05 shares * $100/share = $105 to 1.05 * $110/share = $115.50.You can see this “shares per token” for each asset in our web app at app.ondo.financeScaled UI on Solana and BNB Chain On Solana and BNB Chain, GM tokens support Scaled UI, a display standard that wallets and explorers can integrate. Scaled UI adjusts how your balance is displayed so that the token price shown matches the underlying stock price. Using our ACME example above:| Standard Display | Scaled UI Display | |
|---|---|---|
| Balance | 1 token | 1.05 tokens |
| Token Price | $105 | $100 |
| Total Value | $105 | $105 |
What is a total-return tracker?
Total-return trackers are financial assets that are designed to mirror the complete performance of an index or asset. Unlike price return trackers, which only capture an asset’s market value changes, total return trackers account for all cash flows—dividends, interest, or capital gains distributions—assuming these are reinvested to compound returns (net of applicable withholding taxes).A total-return tracker includes:- Price movements – gains or losses in the asset’s market value
- Income distributions – such as dividends (for stocks) or interest (for bonds)
- Corporate actions – like mergers that may affect total value (learn more)

