The UK government has tapped HSBC’s blockchain platform to run a pilot for issuing digital government bonds, called the Digital Gilt Instrument, or DIGIT. RelatedThe UK government has tapped HSBC’s blockchain platform to run a pilot for issuing digital government bonds, called the Digital Gilt Instrument, or DIGIT. Related

HSBC To Power Pilot Issuance Of UK Digital Bonds – Details

2026/02/13 19:00
3 min read

The UK government has tapped HSBC’s blockchain platform to run a pilot for issuing digital government bonds, called the Digital Gilt Instrument, or DIGIT.

The move marks a concrete step toward testing whether blockchain technology can improve efficiency in sovereign debt markets.

Reports say legal support for the program will be provided by Ashurst LLP, underlining the complexity of putting a regulated tokenised issuance into practice.

Pilot Program Aims To Explore On-Chain Settlement

According to reports, the pilot will issue short-dated digital gilts within a sandbox environment supervised by the UK’s financial regulators.

That setup allows officials to test issuance, transfer, and settlement processes on a distributed ledger while keeping the main debt system unchanged.

HSBC’s Orion platform has previously supported tokenized bond projects abroad and was chosen because it can handle transactions at scale.

The government describes the pilot as a means for it to test what works, spot areas for potential savings, and clear up the legality of a fresh type of bond issue.

According to UK Economic Secretary to the Treasury, Lucy Rigby, “Today we’ve taken an important step towards issuing GB’s 1st Digital Gilt Instrument.” Rigby pointed out that she looks forward to “working with HSBC and other parties to deliver DIGIT.”

Timing And Procurement Process

There has been talk of having a digital gilt for months, and that has put the pilot back from the original expectations.

According to sources, the extra time has given the Treasury an opportunity to assess various proposals from different companies: HSBC, the London Stock Exchange, and fintech companies.

The decision appears to be a reflection of the conservative approach the regulators would like to take, as well as the government’s intent of avoiding surprises in tokenized debt trialing.

According to reports, the pilot bonds used in this process have to replicate realistic issuance circumstances without jeopardizing market stability.

Goals And Metrics Of The Pilot

The program will focus on several practical measures: settlement speed, custody arrangements, secondary market accessibility, and reconciliation of on-chain records with central books.

Reports have disclosed that authorities will closely monitor how automated processes handle bond lifecycles and any taxable events that arise.

The results will determine whether the technology is robust enough for wider adoption and whether operational or legal frameworks need adjustment before scaling.

Banks and investors are watching the pilot carefully. They want systems that plug into existing Treasury and clearing operations without adding unnecessary risk.

Reports say the pilot could set the stage for broader use of tokenized debt in the UK, though uptake will depend on measurable efficiency gains rather than novelty.

The government sees this as part of a broader effort to maintain the UK’s competitiveness in capital markets and to attract both domestic and international investment.

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