Crypto & Web3·Jun 5, 2026

JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citi to start blockchain offensive with shared tokenized network

American's biggest banks plan to introduce a shared tokenized network next year to tackle the potential threat of stablecoins eating into their deposits.

CoinDesk2 min readVerified
JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citi to start blockchain offensive with shared tokenized network
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The gist
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American's biggest banks plan to introduce a shared tokenized network next year to tackle the potential threat of stablecoins eating into their deposits.

  • American's biggest banks plan to introduce a shared tokenized network next year to tackle the potential threat of stablecoins eating into their deposits.
  • Some banks are calling the network "the bridge," others call it "the chain," the WSJ said.Tokenized deposits are blockchain representations of customers' money held at a bank.
  • The planned system will convert these deposits into a digital token that can be transferred swiftly on a blockchain.Stablecoins are dollar-pegged digital assets issued by crypto companies that live outside the traditional banking system.
  • The tokenized deposit network is designed to ensure deposits remain within the banking system while giving them crypto-like capabilities.
$3.05 million$4.4 billion$19.30 million7.2%October 2025
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American's biggest banks plan to introduce a shared tokenized network next year to tackle the potential threat of stablecoins eating into their deposits. Jun 5, 2026, 9:16 a.m. 2 min readMake preferred on America's biggest banks, including JPMorgan, Citi and Bank of America, plan to build a shared, tokenized deposit network by the first half of 2027 to protect their deposits from the threat posed by stablecoins, the Wall Street Journal reported.The system will be operated by The Clearing House, the payments company collectively owned by the banks. Some banks are calling the network "the bridge," others call it "the chain," the WSJ said.Tokenized deposits are blockchain representations of customers' money held at a bank. The planned system will convert these deposits into a digital token that can be transferred swiftly on a blockchain.Stablecoins are dollar-pegged digital assets issued by crypto companies that live outside the traditional banking system. The Clarity Act legislation currently advancing through Congress could allow them to pay returns to holders, potentially making bank deposits less attractive because the tokens also offer faster, cheaper payment capabilities over a blockchain.If customers adopt stablecoins at scale, banks could face a deposit flight to crypto wallets, and deposits are what banks rely on to extend credit in the economy. The tokenized deposit network is designed to ensure deposits remain within the banking system while giving them crypto-like capabilities. The WSJ report said the Clearing House expects large multinationals to embrace the tokenized deposit network as a gateway to programmable treasury options, real-time liquidity management and cross-border payments."This is a big move for the banks," CEO David Watson told the newspaper, describing a "radically different" future around onchain payments.More For YouU.S. spot bitcoin ETFs pulled $3.05 million in net inflows on Wednesday after 13 straight sessions of redemptions totaling roughly $4.4 billion, while ether ETFs ended a 17-day outflow streak with $19.30 million led entirely by BlackRock's ETHA.What to know: U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs ended a 13-session outflow streak with a modest $3.05 million net inflow, after more than $4.4 billion in redemptions since mid-May.Total bitcoin ETF holdings have fallen about 7.2% from their October 2025 peak to 1.277 million BTC, while ether ETFs also broke a 17-day outflow...Read full story

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