---
title: "Swift Launches a Blockchain Ledger to Test Tokenized Deposits With 17 Big Banks"
description: "Swift, the messaging network that ties together more than 11,000 banks worldwide, is putting a blockchain-based shared ledger into a pilot with 17 major banks, including Citi, HSBC and UBS. The goal is round-the-clock cross-border settlement using 'tokenized deposits', a sign the incumbents of global finance are moving onto the same rails as crypto rather than ceding ground to it."
category: "Crypto"
category_url: https://boursel.com/category/crypto
author: "Olivia Chen"
published: 2026-07-09T10:37:12.000Z
updated: 2026-07-09T10:37:12.000Z
canonical: https://boursel.com/article/swift-launches-a-blockchain-ledger-to-test-tokenized-deposits-with-17-big-banks
tags: ["swift", "blockchain", "tokenized-deposits", "banks", "payments"]
---
# Swift Launches a Blockchain Ledger to Test Tokenized Deposits With 17 Big Banks

Swift, the messaging network that ties together more than 11,000 banks worldwide, is putting a blockchain-based shared ledger into a pilot with 17 major banks, including Citi, HSBC and UBS. The goal is round-the-clock cross-border settlement using 'tokenized deposits', a sign the incumbents of global finance are moving onto the same rails as crypto rather than ceding ground to it.

The plumbing of global banking is starting to look more like crypto. Swift, the cooperative that runs the messaging system banks use to move money across borders, said it is putting a blockchain-based shared ledger into a live pilot with 17 major banks, [The Block reported](https://www.theblock.co/post/407687/swift-launches-blockchain-ledger-for-tokenized-deposit-pilot-with-17-banks). It is a notable move by an institution that sits at the center of the existing financial system, onto the kind of technology that was supposed to disrupt it.

## What Swift is, and why this is a shift

Swift is not a bank and does not hold money. It is the network that carries payment instructions between more than 11,000 financial institutions in over 200 countries, the messaging layer that tells banks to move funds, [Swift says](https://www.swift.com/news-events/press-releases/swifts-blockchain-ledger-ready-use-17-banks-set-pioneer-tokenised-cross-border-payments-trusted-global-infrastructure). Its weakness is age: the system reflects a world of business hours, closing on nights and weekends, and cross-border transfers can still take days to settle. Putting a "shared ledger", a single record all parties can see and update, at the heart of that network is meant to fix exactly those gaps.

## What are tokenized deposits

The pilot centers on "tokenized deposits". A tokenized deposit is ordinary commercial-bank money, the dollars or euros already sitting in your bank account, represented as a digital token on a shared ledger. The distinction matters. It is not a stablecoin, which is typically issued by a private company against reserves, and it is not a central-bank digital currency issued by a government. It is a bank's own deposit, in token form, so it can move on a blockchain while remaining a claim on that bank.

The appeal is speed and availability. On a shared ledger, a transfer between banks can be seen and settled in near real time, around the clock, even at midnight on a Sunday, before it is finalized through the usual banking infrastructure. For cross-border payments, that promises to compress a process measured in days into something closer to instant.

## Who is involved

Seventeen banks across several continents are taking part, including Citi, HSBC, UBS, BNP Paribas, Standard Chartered, Wells Fargo, BNY, DBS, ANZ and MUFG, [Swift said](https://www.swift.com/news-events/press-releases/swifts-blockchain-ledger-ready-use-17-banks-set-pioneer-tokenised-cross-border-payments-trusted-global-infrastructure). The ledger is built on Hyperledger Besu, an open-source technology compatible with the Ethereum ecosystem, [The Block reported](https://www.theblock.co/post/407687/swift-launches-blockchain-ledger-for-tokenized-deposit-pilot-with-17-banks). The idea is a neutral, shared piece of infrastructure that any member bank can plug into, rather than a private chain owned by one institution.

## Why it matters

The significance is who is doing this. Much of the momentum behind stablecoins and private blockchains came from the fact that traditional payments were slow and closed; crypto offered always-on settlement. By building its own shared ledger, Swift, the incumbent that connects almost every bank on earth, is moving to offer the same thing from inside the system. Its greatest asset is reach: a standard adopted across its network could scale faster than any single challenger.

It is still early. This is a pilot, not a finished product, and questions remain over regulation, how widely tokenized deposits will be accepted, and how quickly banks move from testing to real transactions. But the direction is clear. The technologies that were framed as a threat to banks are increasingly being absorbed by them, and Swift putting tokenized deposits on a shared ledger is one of the clearest signs yet that the mainstream of finance intends to own that future rather than resist it. This article is informational and not investment advice.

## Sources

- [Swift launches blockchain ledger for tokenized deposit pilot with 17 banks](https://www.theblock.co/post/407687/swift-launches-blockchain-ledger-for-tokenized-deposit-pilot-with-17-banks)
- [Swift's blockchain ledger ready for use as 17 banks set to pioneer tokenised cross-border payments](https://www.swift.com/news-events/press-releases/swifts-blockchain-ledger-ready-use-17-banks-set-pioneer-tokenised-cross-border-payments-trusted-global-infrastructure)

