The post JPMorgan just put JPM Coin bank deposits on Base appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. For decades, wholesale dollar settlement has meant waiting for Fedwire to open, and JPMorgan just stopped waiting. The bank converted its permissioned “JPM Coin” system into JPMD, a deposit token backed by insured balances at JPMorgan, and placed it on Coinbase’s Ethereum layer-2 (L2) Base. Pilot transactions with B2C2, Coinbase, and Mastercard are already live. The timing isn’t accidental, as JPMorgan is betting that corporate treasurers and trading desks will pay for programmable, round-the-clock liquidity before the Federal Reserve decides whether to extend Fedwire hours. This isn’t DeFi experimentation, but a regulated bank money running on public rails with smart contract hooks instead. JPMD represents actual deposit liabilities at a systemically important bank, subject to FDIC insurance and bank supervision. However, the ledger now resides on an Ethereum rollup, rather than JPMorgan’s internal database. The bank frames this as commercial-bank money going programmable: instant, composable, and available when markets don’t sleep. The 24/7 claim and its boundaries Between two JPMorgan clients using JPMD, settlement runs 24/7. Transfers finalize on Base within seconds because the token move and JPMorgan’s internal ledger update simultaneously. Executives are pitching “seconds” and “always-on” settlement, and within the network, they can deliver it. The current constraint is interoperability. True interbank settlement still requires either a counterparty bank issuing a compatible token or a fallback to legacy infrastructure. If a counterparty banks elsewhere, JPMD stops being instant money and becomes a claim that needs to be converted through RTP or FedNow for retail-sized flows, or through Fedwire when it reopens for wholesale reserve transfers. This is a full-time settlement within JPMorgan’s perimeter, not a universal 24/7 settlement across US banks. The Federal Reserve has proposed expanding Fedwire to 22/7/365 operation, but that remains a proposal. Meanwhile, JPMD delivers the experience today, within a single institution’s boundary. What… The post JPMorgan just put JPM Coin bank deposits on Base appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. For decades, wholesale dollar settlement has meant waiting for Fedwire to open, and JPMorgan just stopped waiting. The bank converted its permissioned “JPM Coin” system into JPMD, a deposit token backed by insured balances at JPMorgan, and placed it on Coinbase’s Ethereum layer-2 (L2) Base. Pilot transactions with B2C2, Coinbase, and Mastercard are already live. The timing isn’t accidental, as JPMorgan is betting that corporate treasurers and trading desks will pay for programmable, round-the-clock liquidity before the Federal Reserve decides whether to extend Fedwire hours. This isn’t DeFi experimentation, but a regulated bank money running on public rails with smart contract hooks instead. JPMD represents actual deposit liabilities at a systemically important bank, subject to FDIC insurance and bank supervision. However, the ledger now resides on an Ethereum rollup, rather than JPMorgan’s internal database. The bank frames this as commercial-bank money going programmable: instant, composable, and available when markets don’t sleep. The 24/7 claim and its boundaries Between two JPMorgan clients using JPMD, settlement runs 24/7. Transfers finalize on Base within seconds because the token move and JPMorgan’s internal ledger update simultaneously. Executives are pitching “seconds” and “always-on” settlement, and within the network, they can deliver it. The current constraint is interoperability. True interbank settlement still requires either a counterparty bank issuing a compatible token or a fallback to legacy infrastructure. If a counterparty banks elsewhere, JPMD stops being instant money and becomes a claim that needs to be converted through RTP or FedNow for retail-sized flows, or through Fedwire when it reopens for wholesale reserve transfers. This is a full-time settlement within JPMorgan’s perimeter, not a universal 24/7 settlement across US banks. The Federal Reserve has proposed expanding Fedwire to 22/7/365 operation, but that remains a proposal. Meanwhile, JPMD delivers the experience today, within a single institution’s boundary. What…

JPMorgan just put JPM Coin bank deposits on Base

For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at crypto.news@mexc.com

For decades, wholesale dollar settlement has meant waiting for Fedwire to open, and JPMorgan just stopped waiting.

The bank converted its permissioned “JPM Coin” system into JPMD, a deposit token backed by insured balances at JPMorgan, and placed it on Coinbase’s Ethereum layer-2 (L2) Base.

Pilot transactions with B2C2, Coinbase, and Mastercard are already live. The timing isn’t accidental, as JPMorgan is betting that corporate treasurers and trading desks will pay for programmable, round-the-clock liquidity before the Federal Reserve decides whether to extend Fedwire hours.

This isn’t DeFi experimentation, but a regulated bank money running on public rails with smart contract hooks instead.

JPMD represents actual deposit liabilities at a systemically important bank, subject to FDIC insurance and bank supervision. However, the ledger now resides on an Ethereum rollup, rather than JPMorgan’s internal database.

The bank frames this as commercial-bank money going programmable: instant, composable, and available when markets don’t sleep.

The 24/7 claim and its boundaries

Between two JPMorgan clients using JPMD, settlement runs 24/7. Transfers finalize on Base within seconds because the token move and JPMorgan’s internal ledger update simultaneously.

Executives are pitching “seconds” and “always-on” settlement, and within the network, they can deliver it.

The current constraint is interoperability. True interbank settlement still requires either a counterparty bank issuing a compatible token or a fallback to legacy infrastructure.

If a counterparty banks elsewhere, JPMD stops being instant money and becomes a claim that needs to be converted through RTP or FedNow for retail-sized flows, or through Fedwire when it reopens for wholesale reserve transfers.

This is a full-time settlement within JPMorgan’s perimeter, not a universal 24/7 settlement across US banks.

The Federal Reserve has proposed expanding Fedwire to 22/7/365 operation, but that remains a proposal. Meanwhile, JPMD delivers the experience today, within a single institution’s boundary.

What Base gains, what Ethereum absorbs

These are permissioned balances riding a public rollup.

Base provides cheap blockspace and native smart contract functionality, while JPMorgan controls who can hold or interact with JPMD through allowlists and contract-level access logic.

The immediate on-chain footprint will be modest relative to retail DeFi volumes, but the symbolic weight is considerable: regulated bank money now transacts on an Ethereum L2.

That means ETH-secured infrastructure carries bank-grade flows, and compliance-gated applications can plug into the same execution environment as permissionless protocols.

Coinbase has been positioning Base for this moment, as “institutions onchain” was the pitch from launch.

Now, a major bank is validating that thesis by choosing Base over private or consortium chains. For Ethereum, this introduces a new class of economic activity to L2 security demand, even if those flows never interact with open DeFi markets.

For Base, it’s proof of product-market fit in the institutional segment and a moat against competing L2s that lack comparable regulatory relationships or custody integration.

Deposit tokens and stablecoins

Deposit tokens are claims on a specific bank, not on a non-bank issuer’s reserve portfolio. That structural difference matters, as JPMD can be interest-bearing sitting inside the banking perimeter, and appeals to treasurers who face internal or regulatory restrictions on holding stablecoins.

However, deposit tokens aren’t universally cash-like across institutions yet, as their value proposition weakens the moment a counterparty isn’t with the same issuer.

Expect coexistence rather than displacement. USDC remains the open, composable dollar for permissionless venues and cross-border flows where bank relationships don’t exist or don’t scale.

JPMD is a gated rail for large, KYC’d transactions and on-exchange collateral management, which Coinbase can integrate natively.

Skeptics already argue that deposit tokens aren’t a payment breakthrough until multi-bank interoperability arrives. Until then, they’re walled gardens with smart contract features.

The move allows JPMorgan to bypass “banking hours” constraints without waiting for the Federal Reserve to extend Fedwire or for industry-wide adoption of RTP and FedNow at a wholesale scale.

After-hours liquidity shuffles between JPMorgan clients become trivial, as corporate treasurers can move millions at 2 a.m. on Sunday if they need to. This creates competitive pressure on banks that are still bound to batch settlement windows and business-day cutoffs.

The change also creates strategic tension. The Fed’s proposed Fedwire expansion would deliver always-on wholesale settlement across the banking system, but JPMorgan is offering a version of that future today within its own walls.

If other large banks follow with their own deposit tokens, the industry could fragment into competing networks unless standards converge.

If they don’t follow, JPMorgan gains a liquidity and service advantage that becomes self-reinforcing as clients consolidate their activity with the bank, which can move money at any time.

Multi-bank networks are the unlock

The endgame depends on interoperability. If other systemically important banks issue compatible tokens, or if initiatives like the Regulated Liability Network in the US and UK tokenized deposit pilots converge on shared standards, then “24/7 bank money” stops being a single-bank capability and starts to resemble a new, programmable clearing layer.

That’s when deposit tokens become infrastructure, not just a product.

In the near term, how JPMD is utilized on Coinbase venues and in custody workflows will be closely observed. Settlement, collateral management, and corporate treasury sweeps are the first obvious applications.

If volumes grow and other banks join, the competitive dynamics shift: Base becomes a shared settlement venue for institutional dollar flows, and Ethereum L2s become the default execution layer for programmable bank money.

If they don’t join, JPMorgan has built a faster pipeline for its own clients, and a reminder that the Fed no longer controls the calendar for wholesale settlement.

Mentioned in this article

Source: https://cryptoslate.com/jpmorgan-just-put-real-bank-deposits-on-ethereum-and-beat-the-fed-to-24-7-settlement/

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact crypto.news@mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

T7X Launches Regulated Launchpad for Tokenized Real-World Asset Securities

T7X Launches Regulated Launchpad for Tokenized Real-World Asset Securities

SHERIDAN, Wyo., March  18, 2026  (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- T7X announces the launch of the T7X Launchpad, a digital issuance platform designed to support the crea
Share
CryptoReporter2026/03/18 20:49
Why The Green Bay Packers Must Take The Cleveland Browns Seriously — As Hard As That Might Be

Why The Green Bay Packers Must Take The Cleveland Browns Seriously — As Hard As That Might Be

The post Why The Green Bay Packers Must Take The Cleveland Browns Seriously — As Hard As That Might Be appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Jordan Love and the Green Bay Packers are off to a 2-0 start. Getty Images The Green Bay Packers are, once again, one of the NFL’s better teams. The Cleveland Browns are, once again, one of the league’s doormats. It’s why unbeaten Green Bay (2-0) is a 8-point favorite at winless Cleveland (0-2) Sunday according to betmgm.com. The money line is also Green Bay -500. Most expect this to be a Packers’ rout, and it very well could be. But Green Bay knows taking anyone in this league for granted can prove costly. “I think if you look at their roster, the paper, who they have on that team, what they can do, they got a lot of talent and things can turn around quickly for them,” Packers safety Xavier McKinney said. “We just got to kind of keep that in mind and know we not just walking into something and they just going to lay down. That’s not what they going to do.” The Browns certainly haven’t laid down on defense. Far from. Cleveland is allowing an NFL-best 191.5 yards per game. The Browns gave up 141 yards to Cincinnati in Week 1, including just seven in the second half, but still lost, 17-16. Cleveland has given up an NFL-best 45.5 rushing yards per game and just 2.1 rushing yards per attempt. “The biggest thing is our defensive line is much, much improved over last year and I think we’ve got back to our personality,” defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz said recently. “When we play our best, our D-line leads us there as our engine.” The Browns rank third in the league in passing defense, allowing just 146.0 yards per game. Cleveland has also gone 30 straight games without allowing a 300-yard passer, the longest active streak in the NFL.…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 00:41
Edges higher ahead of BoC-Fed policy outcome

Edges higher ahead of BoC-Fed policy outcome

The post Edges higher ahead of BoC-Fed policy outcome appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. USD/CAD gains marginally to near 1.3760 ahead of monetary policy announcements by the Fed and the BoC. Both the Fed and the BoC are expected to lower interest rates. USD/CAD forms a Head and Shoulder chart pattern. The USD/CAD pair ticks up to near 1.3760 during the late European session on Wednesday. The Loonie pair gains marginally ahead of monetary policy outcomes by the Bank of Canada (BoC) and the Federal Reserve (Fed) during New York trading hours. Both the BoC and the Fed are expected to cut interest rates amid mounting labor market conditions in their respective economies. Inflationary pressures in the Canadian economy have cooled down, emerging as another reason behind the BoC’s dovish expectations. However, the Fed is expected to start the monetary-easing campaign despite the United States (US) inflation remaining higher. Investors will closely monitor press conferences from both Fed Chair Jerome Powell and BoC Governor Tiff Macklem to get cues about whether there will be more interest rate cuts in the remainder of the year. According to analysts from Barclays, the Fed’s latest median projections for interest rates are likely to call for three interest rate cuts by 2025. Ahead of the Fed’s monetary policy, the US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the Greenback’s value against six major currencies, holds onto Tuesday’s losses near 96.60. USD/CAD forms a Head and Shoulder chart pattern, which indicates a bearish reversal. The neckline of the above-mentioned chart pattern is plotted near 1.3715. The near-term trend of the pair remains bearish as it stays below the 20-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA), which trades around 1.3800. The 14-day Relative Strength Index (RSI) slides to near 40.00. A fresh bearish momentum would emerge if the RSI falls below that level. Going forward, the asset could slide towards the round level of…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 01:23