- JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo and other large banks plan to launch a shared tokenized deposit network in the first half of 2027, operated by the Clearing House, to enable 24/7 blockchain-based settlement.
- The network — nicknamed “the bridge” or “the chain” internally — will connect traditional payment rails with blockchain infrastructure and allow programmable treasury operations, real-time liquidity management, and cross-border payments.
- The move is a direct defensive response to the growing stablecoin threat: Congress has advanced legislation that could allow stablecoins to offer interest-like structures, intensifying bank fears that crypto firms will siphon deposits.
- Banks favor tokenized deposits over stablecoins because they retain the same credit-risk profile, regulatory treatment, and accounting standards as regular bank deposits — keeping funds within the banking system while gaining blockchain speed.
What Happened?
The largest U.S. banks are mounting their most coordinated response yet to the threat posed by stablecoins and crypto payment rails. JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, and other large commercial banks plan to launch a shared tokenized deposit network in the first half of 2027 through the Clearing House — a real-time payment operator co-owned by the group. The network will allow tokenized deposits to move instantly across blockchain infrastructure with 24/7 settlement, targeting large multinational corporations as initial users. “This is a big move for the banks,” said Clearing House CEO David Watson, who described the industry facing a “radically different” future around on-chain payments. The underlying blockchain vendor has not yet been selected.
Why It Matters?
The tokenized deposit network is a direct answer to an existential threat: stablecoins are gaining regulatory legitimacy under Trump, and recently advanced legislation left room for interest-like structures on stablecoins — a feature that could make them genuinely competitive with bank deposits for the first time. Banks have watched crypto firms step closer to their core business and are now making a structural bet that blockchain-based banking can be done on their terms. Tokenized deposits are strategically superior to stablecoins for banks: they retain existing credit-risk profiles, regulatory expectations, and accounting treatments, meaning banks can offer blockchain settlement without the complexity of creating a new instrument. JPMorgan already has its own internal tokenized deposit system (JPM Coin) and has expanded it to Base, Coinbase’s public blockchain.
What’s Next?
The banks could still issue stablecoins if market demand materializes — and the Clearing House explored a joint stablecoin consortium with Zelle operator Early Warning Services last year. But for now, the tokenized deposit network is the priority. A blockchain vendor must still be selected. The target is large corporate clients, who may use it for programmable treasury operations and cross-border payments before retail adoption becomes relevant. Bank of America’s Mark Monaco acknowledged clients aren’t “beating down the door” yet — but the bank wants to be well-positioned when demand arrives. The launch will be a major test of whether the legacy banking system can adapt blockchain infrastructure fast enough to hold the line against a crypto industry moving quickly under a friendly regulatory regime.
Source: The Wall Street Journal









