The UK government has selected HSBC to power its first Digital Gilt Instrument pilot, marking a significant step toward issuing sovereign debt on blockchain infrastructure.
HM Treasury confirmed that HSBC’s Orion distributed ledger platform will support the issuance of the UK’s first Digital Gilt Instrument. The pilot bond will be issued within the government’s Digital Securities Sandbox and settled onchain, operating independently from the country’s primary debt management program. The government also appointed Ashurst LLP to provide legal services for the DIGIT initiative.
The DIGIT pilot places the UK at the forefront of financial innovation among major economies. If the issuance proceeds successfully, Britain could become the first G7 nation to launch a tokenized government bond on blockchain infrastructure.
Originally announced in 2024, the program is designed to test how distributed ledger technology can improve the structure of sovereign debt markets. The Treasury aims to build foundational infrastructure that could encourage broader adoption of digital securities across the UK financial system.
Lucy Rigby KC MP, Economic Secretary to the Treasury, said:
Her remarks underline the government’s ambition to strengthen Britain’s competitiveness while embracing emerging financial technologies.
In a separate release, HSBC stated that issuing digital gilts and corporate bonds on blockchain has the potential to significantly accelerate transaction settlement times. Faster settlement can lower operational friction, reduce counterparty risk, and free up capital that would otherwise remain locked during clearing processes.
The DIGIT instrument will be digitally native, meaning it is created directly on the blockchain rather than replicated from a traditional bond structure. Importantly, it will be issued outside the government’s core debt program, allowing policymakers to experiment without disrupting the broader gilt market.
Patrick George, HSBC’s global head of markets and securities services, said the bank was “delighted” to support the development of the gilt market and wider UK economy.
HSBC brings substantial experience to the project. Its Orion platform has facilitated more than $3.5 billion in digital bond issuances globally across sovereign, central bank, financial institution, and corporate sectors. The bank was also involved in the HK$10 billion offering by the Hong Kong government, one of the largest digital bond transactions to date.
Because participation required involvement in the UK’s Digital Securities Sandbox, only a small number of institutions were eligible. Among them, HSBC and Euroclear were seen as the only providers with significant experience in digital bond issuance.
The Treasury said it is engaging additional suppliers to support technical elements of the DIGIT pilot, ensuring the project meets regulatory and operational standards.
Although interest in tokenizing traditional financial assets continues to grow worldwide, tokenized debt remains a small segment of the global bond market. Governments and financial institutions are increasingly running pilot programs, but full scale adoption is still developing.
It remains unclear when the first Digital Gilt Instrument will be issued under the new framework. The timeline will likely depend on technical readiness and market conditions.
In my experience covering digital asset markets, this move feels more strategic than symbolic. Sovereign debt markets are traditionally conservative, so when a major economy like the UK embraces blockchain infrastructure, it signals serious intent.
I found it particularly important that the pilot operates outside the main debt program. That gives regulators space to test, learn, and refine the model without adding systemic risk. If the UK demonstrates measurable gains in efficiency and cost reduction, I believe other advanced economies will pay very close attention.
This is not just about one digital bond. It is about whether blockchain can reshape how governments fund themselves in the years ahead.
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