SWIFT, the backbone of the global interbank financial messaging ecosystem, has officially deployed its native blockchain-based ledger. Following nine months of strict, quiet technical development, the new distributed ledger is live for its inaugural operational phase. Seventeen tier-one global banking institutions are preparing to deploy and test tokenized bank deposits directly on the secure network.
The primary goal of the infrastructure pilot is to overcome the limitations of traditional operating hours. By converting standard commercial bank deposits into tokenized units on a shared ledger, participating institutions can settle cross-border transactions 24/7. This effectively removes the settlement delays associated with overnight gaps, regional holidays, and weekend banking closures.
Retaining Traditional Oversight via On-Chain Velocity
A key aspect of SWIFT’s blockchain deployment is its integration with existing risk management systems. Rather than bypassing established compliance mechanisms, the ledger builds current credit risk, identity verification, and anti-money laundering (AML) controls directly into the transaction logic.
According to Thierry Chilosi, Chief Business Officer at SWIFT, the launch represents an essential milestone for regulated digital assets. The architecture allows tokenized value to move internationally with the real-time velocity required by modern commerce, while maintaining the safety and compliance standards of global finance. This foundation could eventually support automated smart contracts and advanced machine-to-machine commercial micro-payments.
Structural Shift Across Institutional Finance
The initiative arrives as traditional finance rapidly adopts asset tokenization. The 17 participating banks include major institutions such as HSBC, Citi, BNP Paribas, UBS, ANZ, DBS, and Standard Chartered. While SWIFT’s existing messaging network already routes 75% of its transactions to beneficiary banks within ten minutes, the new ledger targets instant, programmable finality.
The launch reflects broader structural changes across Wall Street. Just last month, a separate consortium of major US commercial banks, including JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo, unveiled plans to launch a unified tokenized deposit network by early 2027. Concurrently, the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) and its parent company, Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), are building blockchain infrastructure alongside Securitize to enable 24/7 on-chain trading and settlement for traditional equities and exchange-traded funds (ETFs).