The biggest names in American banking are teaming up to build something that sounds a lot like what crypto has been doing for years, except with suits and compliance departments. JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo are collaborating on a shared tokenized deposit network targeting a launch in the first half of 2027.
The project, informally called “the bridge” or “the chain” depending on who you ask, would transform traditional bank deposits into digital tokens on a blockchain. The Clearing House, which already handles a huge chunk of US interbank payments, is set to oversee the operation.
What the banks are actually building
The network is designed to enable instant settlements around the clock. Instead of waiting hours or days for large payments to clear between institutions, tokenized deposits would move on a shared ledger in real time.
The planned capabilities include programmable treasury management, real-time liquidity control, and enhanced cross-border transfer functionality.
Clearing House CEO David Watson described it as “a big move for the banks.”
The collaboration is still in its early stages. No blockchain vendor has been selected yet, and technical specifications remain in development.
Why now: the stablecoin threat is real
Stablecoins have been quietly eating into the territory that banks have monopolized for decades. Circle’s USDC, Tether’s USDT, and a growing roster of competitors offer instant, programmable money movement without the friction of traditional banking rails. As potential regulatory shifts in Washington move toward favoring crypto firms, the threat has become impossible to ignore.
The tokenized deposit network is, at its core, a defensive play. By offering the speed and programmability of stablecoins while keeping funds within the regulated banking perimeter, these banks are essentially saying: you don’t need to leave the system to get what crypto promises.
The initiative also builds on existing tokenization work by the participating banks. JPMorgan has been perhaps the most aggressive on this front, having previously developed JPM Coin for internal transfers. This new network would extend that concept across multiple institutions, creating interoperability that individual bank tokens can’t achieve alone.
What this means for investors
If banks can offer the same instant settlement and programmability that stablecoins provide, but with the added security of deposit insurance and regulatory clarity, the value proposition for holding stablecoins as a settlement mechanism gets weaker. Stablecoin issuers like Circle and Tether should be paying close attention to how this competitive dynamic evolves.
The vendor selection, still pending, could be a significant catalyst for whichever protocol wins the contract.
A first-half 2027 launch means this network would arrive in a regulatory environment that could look dramatically different from today’s. Depending on how stablecoin legislation and broader crypto regulation shake out in Washington, the competitive landscape between tokenized deposits and stablecoins could shift significantly before the first transaction clears.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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