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SWIFT announces a strategic partnership with BNY Mellon and over 30 global financial institutions to develop a shared blockchain ledger designed for real-time cross-border payments and the movement of tokenized assets.
The conceptual prototype is being developed by Consensys, indicating an architecture compatible with Ethereum.
What is being built
The initiative does not replace SWIFT's existing infrastructure but complements it. The shared ledger will serve specific categories of transactions where blockchain settlement offers advantages—24/7 payments between banks and transfer of tokenized assets across different digital ecosystems.
Smart contracts will record, validate, and enforce regulatory requirements within the execution logic itself. This is the key element: instant settlement payments without sanctions control pose a greater risk than slow, but properly processed payments. Integrated compliance makes the system applicable in a strictly regulated banking environment.
Who is involved
Among the institutions are BNY Mellon, HSBC, J.P. Morgan, Citi, Deutsche Bank, Standard Chartered, and Bank of America. This covers multiple currencies, jurisdictions, and key correspondent banking centers. Such concentration of participants provides a network effect that smaller initiatives find difficult to achieve.
BNY Mellon has described the project as a strategic opportunity for 2026, emphasizing its potential not only to accelerate payments but also to improve collateral management. Instant movement of tokenized collateral between global custodial structures could significantly reduce operational costs.
Technological and infrastructural context
Consensys is developing the prototype, pointing toward an Ethereum-compatible architecture and potential operational interoperability with existing enterprise solutions. Previous tests included using Chainlink to connect public and private blockchains, reinforcing integration with the broader tokenization infrastructure.
SWIFT’s initiative fits into a broader trend: central banks, regulators, and leading financial institutions are building compatible digital payment rails from different angles—from settlement of central bank money to trade finance and correspondent banking.
What this means for the financial system
The significance of the project is not that blockchain settlement already exists—it is already a reality on a limited scale. More importantly, the institutions that traditionally dominate the international banking infrastructure are actively building its next version.
The transition from prototype to pilot and large-scale deployment will take years. But when participants with the largest market share and the biggest regulatory commitments join such an initiative, it signals that the transformation of financial infrastructure is entering a phase of institutional implementation, not experimentation.