2 articles tagged #InstitutionalPayments — curated RWA tokenization coverage.

Major U.S. financial institutions, including JPMorgan, Citigroup, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo, are collaborating through The Clearing House to develop a shared tokenized-deposit network. Targeted for a first-half 2027 launch, this initiative aims to provide corporate clients with programmable, instant dollar settlements within a regulated banking framework. By mirroring deposit liabilities on a shared ledger, the network seeks to offer an alternative to stablecoins for high-value B2B transactions while maintaining strict compliance standards. This development is significant for the RWA market as it signals a shift toward integrating bank-grade assets with blockchain technology to enhance liquidity and settlement finality. While stablecoins currently dominate open ecosystems, this bank-led rail is designed to capture compliant, permissioned payment flows. The project emphasizes multi-rail orchestration, allowing enterprises to route payments across tokenized deposits, stablecoins, and real-time payments based on specific risk and policy requirements. Ultimately, this move represents a strategic effort by traditional banks to modernize institutional payments while retaining oversight and operational control.

Visa has partnered with stablecoin infrastructure firm Brale to test privacy-enabled, blockchain-based settlement for institutional payment flows. The collaboration utilizes Brale’s U.S. dollar-backed stablecoin, SBC, deployed on the Canton Network to evaluate its potential for faster and more programmable financial transactions. By leveraging the Canton Network’s specific privacy architecture, the initiative aims to allow financial institutions to maintain strict control over sensitive transaction data, addressing a primary barrier to public blockchain adoption. This proof of concept builds upon Visa’s existing blockchain strategy, which began in 2021 with the integration of stablecoin settlement capabilities into its broader payment infrastructure. The project highlights a significant shift toward institutional-grade, compliant blockchain solutions that balance the efficiency of distributed ledgers with the confidentiality requirements of global finance. As Visa continues to position stablecoins as a next-generation settlement layer, this collaboration serves as a practical testing ground for scalable, programmable payment alternatives. The move underscores the growing demand for infrastructure that satisfies both regulatory standards and operational privacy needs within the evolving RWA and digital asset ecosystem.