BNY Mellon, one of the largest global custodians with assets under its management totaling $57.8 trillion, has implemented a significant move to merge conventional banking and blockchain technology. The bank has announced the ability for its institutional clients to make deposits via blockchain technology.
It makes continuous deposits possible for purposes such as managing collateral, margining, and payments. BNY’s goal is to operate the service 24/7. While not open 24/7 as is common for most banks, early adopters of the new service include ICE, Citadel Securities, DRW Holdings, Ripple Prime, Baillie Gifford, and Circle.
As BNY explains, it is not trying to replace traditional banking. Rather, it is trying to improve it. The point of this project is to integrate traditional financial systems with blockchain technology in a way that is understandable and trusted by large banks.
Tokenized deposits may be confused with stablecoins, but there is an important distinction. While stablecoins are typically collateralized by cash or sovereign instruments kept outside traditional banks, tokenized deposits are kept within regulated banks, meaning that the deposits can actually generate interest as they are real deposits made by customers.
This differentiation is receiving attention in light of the GENIUS Act passed in the U.S., which offers clearer regulation for stablecoins and sparks talk about new forms of money in the banking system.
For BNY, the tokenized form of deposits is a stepping stone for other asset classes, such as stocks and bonds. Conventional systems make batch transactions at the end of the banking day. The tokenized form of deposits, on the other hand, could facilitate transactions at any time.
ICE intends to integrate such deposits throughout its clearinghouses to facilitate nonstop trading systems. According to the firm, tokenization may improve the transfer of collateral in a real-time fashion, thus eliminating the need for supplemental capital.
Another is the ability of these deposits to be programmable. This is because these deposits can be set to execute as and when some conditions are met, for instance, the immediate delivery of collateral following payment of a loan or the immediate fulfillment of margin requirements once limits are reached.
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BNY is a pioneer in a new trend of traditional banks that explore blockchain-based deposits. Already alive is JPMorgan’s Coin for institutional payments. Another player that plans to introduce more tokenized deposit services in the U.S. and UAE is HSBC.
In Europe, Barclays made investments in Ubyx, which is a start-up that works on tokenized deposit infrastructure. UBS, PostFinance, and Sygnum Bank conducted pilots on blockchain-based settlement, and SWIFT is also working on on-chain settlement tools.
Cumulatively, all these trends portend a new era for finance. Instead of competing with virtual currencies, leading banks are using blockchain to revamp existing instruments. The launch of BNY is indeed an indication that tokenized deposits might be just the catalyst that would make it easier to seamlessly transition between traditional finance and online markets.
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