BNY launched tokenized deposits that similar client bank balances on a private blockchain while remaining regulated bank liabilities.
The system targets institutional collateral and margin workflows, enabling faster, programmable cash movement with settlement certainty.
Early users include Citadel Securities, ICE, DRW, Ripple Prime, and Circle as markets move toward 24/7 operations.
BNY has launched tokenized deposits on its Digital Assets platform, enabling on-chain representations of client deposit balances. The launch took place in the United States and involves BNY and early institutional participants. According to BNY, the move supports programmable cash for collateral, margin, and settlement workflows using a private blockchain.
How BNY’s Tokenized Deposits Work
The new capability creates on-chain digital book entries that mirror participating clients’ existing demand deposit claims. Notably, these balances remain recorded on BNY’s traditional banking systems to preserve regulatory and reporting standards.
The platform operates on BNY’s private, permissioned blockchain under existing risk, compliance, and control frameworks. Initially, the service focuses on collateral and margin workflows. However, it also supports both traditional and digital market infrastructure connections.
According to BNY, this approach allows institutions to move cash faster while maintaining settlement certainty and transparency. The bank confirmed that the system supports institutional use cases rather than retail payments.
Institutional Participants and Market Context
Early participants include Citadel Securities, ICE, DRW Holdings, Ripple Prime, Baillie Gifford, and Circle, according to Bloomberg. ICE confirmed support for tokenized deposits across its clearinghouses on a 24-hour basis.
Meanwhile, BNY stated that the platform helps institutions prepare for always-on market operations. Carolyn Weinberg, BNY’s Chief Product and Innovation Officer, said tokenized deposits extend trusted bank money onto digital rails.
She added that future versions may support rules-based, near real-time cash movement. Additionally, BNY noted that client deposits remain direct liabilities of the bank, unlike stablecoins.
Why Tokenized Deposits Matter Now
As markets move toward continuous trading, institutions seek faster asset movement with lower friction. Tokenized deposits aim to improve liquidity efficiency across collateral and margin workflows. Furthermore, they support programmable settlement while keeping funds within regulated banking systems.
BNY said the initiative connects traditional banking infrastructure with stablecoins, tokenized money market funds, and other digital rails. As per Bloomberg, the launch follows earlier internal testing aimed at easing payment bottlenecks. With the product now live, BNY has shifted from experimentation to production.
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BNY Launches Tokenized Deposits for On-Chain Cash Use
BNY launched tokenized deposits that similar client bank balances on a private blockchain while remaining regulated bank liabilities.
The system targets institutional collateral and margin workflows, enabling faster, programmable cash movement with settlement certainty.
Early users include Citadel Securities, ICE, DRW, Ripple Prime, and Circle as markets move toward 24/7 operations.
BNY has launched tokenized deposits on its Digital Assets platform, enabling on-chain representations of client deposit balances. The launch took place in the United States and involves BNY and early institutional participants. According to BNY, the move supports programmable cash for collateral, margin, and settlement workflows using a private blockchain.
How BNY’s Tokenized Deposits Work
The new capability creates on-chain digital book entries that mirror participating clients’ existing demand deposit claims. Notably, these balances remain recorded on BNY’s traditional banking systems to preserve regulatory and reporting standards.
The platform operates on BNY’s private, permissioned blockchain under existing risk, compliance, and control frameworks. Initially, the service focuses on collateral and margin workflows. However, it also supports both traditional and digital market infrastructure connections.
According to BNY, this approach allows institutions to move cash faster while maintaining settlement certainty and transparency. The bank confirmed that the system supports institutional use cases rather than retail payments.
Institutional Participants and Market Context
Early participants include Citadel Securities, ICE, DRW Holdings, Ripple Prime, Baillie Gifford, and Circle, according to Bloomberg. ICE confirmed support for tokenized deposits across its clearinghouses on a 24-hour basis.
Meanwhile, BNY stated that the platform helps institutions prepare for always-on market operations. Carolyn Weinberg, BNY’s Chief Product and Innovation Officer, said tokenized deposits extend trusted bank money onto digital rails.
She added that future versions may support rules-based, near real-time cash movement. Additionally, BNY noted that client deposits remain direct liabilities of the bank, unlike stablecoins.
Why Tokenized Deposits Matter Now
As markets move toward continuous trading, institutions seek faster asset movement with lower friction. Tokenized deposits aim to improve liquidity efficiency across collateral and margin workflows. Furthermore, they support programmable settlement while keeping funds within regulated banking systems.
BNY said the initiative connects traditional banking infrastructure with stablecoins, tokenized money market funds, and other digital rails. As per Bloomberg, the launch follows earlier internal testing aimed at easing payment bottlenecks. With the product now live, BNY has shifted from experimentation to production.