JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, and Wells Fargo are spearheading a new initiative to launch a shared tokenized deposit network through The Clearing House (TCH) by the first half of 2027. This collaboration aims to protect traditional bank deposits from the growing influence of stablecoins like USDC and USDT by offering similar blockchain-driven efficiencies.
By representing commercial bank deposits as digital tokens, the lenders intend to enable instant, round-the-clock settlement while keeping funds securely within the regulated banking system.
The project, which some participating banks internally refer to as “the bridge” or “the chain,” represents a direct response to the risk of deposit migration into the crypto ecosystem. Tokenized deposits act as digital versions of standard bank balances, moving across blockchain rails with the same credit-risk profile and regulatory standing as conventional money.
Traditional institutions are increasingly wary that if stablecoins become the primary medium for onchain transactions, core liquidity could exit the banking system entirely.
This defensive posture is backed by specific industry warnings regarding the impact of digital assets on bank balance sheets. In a report published in March, Jeffries estimated that stablecoins could drive a 3% to 5% runoff in core deposits over the next five years. Such a shift could shrink average bank earnings by approximately 3%.
To mitigate this, stablecoin risks embed in U.S. debt are being weighed against the need for a bank-backed alternative that maintains liquidity for corporate treasury operations.
Defending the banking system against stablecoin competition
The battle for dominance over onchain cash has intensified following the GENIUS Act. Reid Noch, vice president of U.S. equity market structure at TD Securities, noted that a competition is now emerging between stablecoins, tokenized deposits, and tokenized money market funds. Banks want to provide the preferred digital instrument for institutional clients who require speed without sacrificing the safety of a regulated environment.
Efficiency is the major selling point for this new network. Reid Noch pointed out that international money wires are currently expensive and often take one to two business days to complete. By using blockchain infrastructure, the TCH network could facilitate near-instant transfers 24 hours a day.
This is a significant shift for TCH, which already operates the Real-Time Payments (RTP) network and the CHIPS high-value clearing system.
Because TCH is owned by 21 major banks, the network has the potential to scale across a broad cross-section of the financial industry. Owners include multinational giants like Barclays, HSBC, Santander, and Deutsche Bank, suggesting that the infrastructure could eventually support seamless cross-border payments. This collective approach mirrors shifting market structure trends where traditional finance adopts crypto-native technology to solve legacy friction.
From proof-of-concept to the 2027 launch
The foundation for this shared network was laid during a 12-week proof-of-concept for the Regulated Liability Network (RLN), which published its findings on July 6, 2023. That trial involved the New York Innovation Center (NYIC) of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, alongside participants such as BNY Mellon, Mastercard, and Wells Fargo.
The study proved that regulated money could move across a shared multi-entity ledger.
In those early tests, the infrastructure was supported by technology providers Digital Asset and SETL, and hosted on Amazon Web Services. Although TCH has not yet named a specific blockchain vendor for the 2027 rollout, the operational goal remains 24/7 dollar-denominated transactions. This “walled garden” approach ensures that while the technology is modern, the participants remain under strict regulatory oversight, unlike public crypto networks.
The move is viewed by many as a watershed moment for blockchain adoption. Cody Carbone, CEO of the Digital Chamber, remarked that the country’s largest institutions are “voluntarily coming onchain.” He argued that this shift proves that the future of finance rests on blockchain infrastructure.
Rather than replacing the dollar, the banks are essentially upgrading it to compete in a digital-first economy while ensuring market confidence and geopolitical shifts don’t undermine their deposit bases.
Strategic implications for corporate treasury management
Corporate treasury departments stand to be the primary beneficiaries of the tokenized deposit initiative. Multinational firms often struggle with fragmented liquidity and limited banking hours. A shared 24/7 network allows these companies to move funds and manage liquidity in real time, regardless of time zones or holidays. This programmable treasury functionality allows for a level of precision that legacy systems cannot match.
Not everyone believes the banks’ version of digital currency will displace crypto-native tokens. Noelle Acheson, author of “Crypto is Macro Now,” observed that while tokenized deposits fit neatly into existing compliance frameworks, they lack the open, permissionless nature of stablecoins.
Banks generally prefer private blockchain systems that move money internally while maintaining tight control over transactions, a stark contrast to the liquidity and flexibility offered by public networks.
Ultimately, the success of the TCH project will depend on whether it can offer enough interoperability between different banks to rival the ubiquity of USDT or USDC. David Watson, CEO of The Clearing House, has described the future of onchain payments as “radically different.”
By standardizing how digital tokens represent bank liabilities, America’s largest lenders hope to stop the deposit drain before it becomes a structural threat to their earnings.
