The Bank of Canada and several of the country’s largest financial institutions completed a full lifecycle trial of a tokenized government bond on March 5, 2026,The Bank of Canada and several of the country’s largest financial institutions completed a full lifecycle trial of a tokenized government bond on March 5, 2026,

Bank of Canada Runs First End-to-End Tokenized Bond Trial With Major Lenders

2026/03/07 05:30
3 min read
For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at crypto.news@mexc.com

The Bank of Canada and several of the country’s largest financial institutions completed a full lifecycle trial of a tokenized government bond on March 5, 2026, testing issuance, bidding, secondary market trading, and redemption on a single distributed ledger platform for the first time.

What Project Samara Actually Did

The trial, called Project Samara, used a C$100 million three-month security issued by Export Development Canada, a government-run trade finance unit. Royal Bank of Canada and TD Bank were among the major lenders participating in the closed investor group.

The technical achievement that separates this from prior tokenization experiments is the settlement layer. For the first time, the Bank of Canada introduced tokenized wholesale Canadian dollars, digital funds created by the central bank, to settle transactions directly on the same ledger as the bonds.

Everything happened on one platform built using Hyperledger Fabric infrastructure. Issuance, trading, and settlement no longer required moving between separate systems or waiting for traditional clearing cycles.

That single-ledger settlement is the meaningful innovation. Most tokenization pilots to date have solved the asset side of the equation while leaving settlement running on traditional rails. Project Samara closed that gap.

What It Proved and What It Did Not

The Bank of Canada identified significant potential for operational efficiency, improved data integrity, and reduced counterparty and settlement risk. Those findings align with every similar pilot conducted globally, from the Hong Kong HKMA cross-border settlement covered earlier this week to Japan’s three megabank stablecoin proof-of-concept.

The Bank of Canada was unusually candid about the barriers ahead. Despite the technical success, the institution noted that widespread adoption may be slow due to increased system complexity, higher liquidity costs, and gaps in the current regulatory framework. That honest assessment distinguishes Project Samara from announcements that present pilot success as a roadmap to imminent deployment.

System complexity increases when legacy infrastructure must interface with new distributed ledger platforms. Liquidity costs rise when capital is locked inside tokenized systems that do not yet connect seamlessly to the broader financial network. Regulatory gaps mean legal certainty around tokenized securities and central bank digital settlement instruments does not yet exist at the standard required for full institutional deployment.

Solana Is Now the Biggest Stablecoin Network by Volume

Ten Years of Building Toward This

Project Samara builds on Project Jasper, the Bank of Canada’s first distributed ledger experiment for interbank payments launched in 2016. A decade separates the two initiatives. The progression from exploring whether distributed ledgers could work for payments to completing a full government bond lifecycle on a single platform with central bank digital settlement reflects how much the underlying infrastructure and institutional understanding has matured.

The same week that Canada completed Project Samara, the U.S. Federal Reserve, FDIC, and OCC jointly confirmed that tokenized securities receive identical capital treatment to traditional securities, Japan’s three largest banks launched a shared stablecoin pilot, and Visa and ANZ completed a cross-border tokenized settlement in Hong Kong. Central bank digital infrastructure is no longer a research project in any of these jurisdictions. It is an active construction site.

The post Bank of Canada Runs First End-to-End Tokenized Bond Trial With Major Lenders appeared first on ETHNews.

Market Opportunity
Lorenzo Protocol Logo
Lorenzo Protocol Price(BANK)
$0.04018
$0.04018$0.04018
-2.35%
USD
Lorenzo Protocol (BANK) Live Price Chart
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

Silver Prices Edge Closer to a Pivotal Support and Resistance Test

Silver Prices Edge Closer to a Pivotal Support and Resistance Test

The post Silver Prices Edge Closer to a Pivotal Support and Resistance Test appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The silver market, although experiencing recent
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/03/07 11:29
U.S. Court Finds Pastor Found Guilty in $3M Crypto Scam

U.S. Court Finds Pastor Found Guilty in $3M Crypto Scam

The post U.S. Court Finds Pastor Found Guilty in $3M Crypto Scam appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Crime 18 September 2025 | 04:05 A Colorado judge has brought closure to one of the state’s most unusual cryptocurrency scandals, declaring INDXcoin to be a fraudulent operation and ordering its founders, Denver pastor Eli Regalado and his wife Kaitlyn, to repay $3.34 million. The ruling, issued by District Court Judge Heidi L. Kutcher, came nearly two years after the couple persuaded hundreds of people to invest in their token, promising safety and abundance through a Christian-branded platform called the Kingdom Wealth Exchange. The scheme ran between June 2022 and April 2023 and drew in more than 300 participants, many of them members of local church networks. Marketing materials portrayed INDXcoin as a low-risk gateway to prosperity, yet the project unraveled almost immediately. The exchange itself collapsed within 24 hours of launch, wiping out investors’ money. Despite this failure—and despite an auditor’s damning review that gave the system a “0 out of 10” for security—the Regalados kept presenting it as a solid opportunity. Colorado regulators argued that the couple’s faith-based appeal was central to the fraud. Securities Commissioner Tung Chan said the Regalados “dressed an old scam in new technology” and used their standing within the Christian community to convince people who had little knowledge of crypto. For him, the case illustrates how modern digital assets can be exploited to replicate classic Ponzi-style tactics under a different name. Court filings revealed where much of the money ended up: luxury goods, vacations, jewelry, a Range Rover, high-end clothing, and even dental procedures. In a video that drew worldwide attention earlier this year, Eli Regalado admitted the funds had been spent, explaining that a portion went to taxes while the remainder was used for a home renovation he claimed was divinely inspired. The judgment not only confirms that INDXcoin qualifies as a…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 09:14
[Newspoint] Overpaid troll

[Newspoint] Overpaid troll

KAUFMAN. Former president Rodrigo Duterte's lawyer Nicholas Kaufman delivers his opening statement before the ICC Pre-Trial Chamber I on February 23, 2026.
Share
Rappler2026/03/07 11:00