Crypto

Tokenized Deposits Give Banks All the Blockchain Benefits Without the Crypto Risk — SWIFT Is Making It Happen


Key Takeaways

  • 50+ banks, including Lloyds, JPMorgan, and Deutsche Bank, have joined SWIFT’s new payments framework, with 25+ going live by June 2026.

  • Four enforceable standards bind every participating bank: fee certainty, full-value delivery, instant settlement where possible, and end-to-end traceability.

  • SWIFT is fixing cross-border payments from within, directly targeting the slow, opaque corridors that XRP and stablecoin rails spent years promising to replace.

More than 50 banks have signed up to a new SWIFT payments framework designed to deliver faster, cheaper, and fully transparent cross-border retail transactions, and not a single one of them needed to touch a cryptocurrency to do it.

The scheme, which SWIFT first announced at its Sibos conference in September 2025 and has been expanding steadily since, now covers institutions across Australia, Bangladesh, Canada, China, Germany, India, Pakistan, Spain, Thailand, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

More than 25 banks committed to processing live payments under the framework by June 2026, covering corridors that include some of the world’s highest-volume remittance routes.

What the Framework Actually Delivers

The SWIFT payments scheme is built around four enforceable commitments that participating banks must honor. Senders receive upfront certainty on fees and foreign exchange rates before initiating a transfer.

 Beneficiaries receive the exact amount sent, with no intermediary deductions along the way.

Settlement runs at the fastest speed permitted by local infrastructure, with instant settlement where possible.

And every transaction provides end-to-end traceability, giving both the sender and the recipient full visibility throughout the payment lifecycle.

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More than 60 banks worldwide are already supporting SWIFT’s payment scheme. | Source: @swiftcommunity on X

Those four commitments target what SWIFT calls last-mile friction, the point in a cross-border payment where delays and cost uncertainty concentrate.

SWIFT’s own messaging network already moves 75% of transactions to destination banks within ten minutes, ahead of the G20’s targets.

The problem has never been the messaging layer. It has been what happens after the message arrives, when a payment enters a domestic banking system with its own processing hours, fee structures, and reconciliation requirements.

The new scheme addresses that by binding participating banks to consistent standards at both ends of the corridor.

Why This Matters More Than a Tech Upgrade

The significance of the framework is not purely operational. It is competitive. Cross-border payments have been the most frequently cited use case for XRP, XLM, and stablecoin rails for nearly a decade.

The argument was always that correspondent banking was too slow, too opaque, and too expensive, and that blockchain-based alternatives could do the job better.

SWIFT’s response is not to argue with that premise. It is to fix the problems within the existing system while keeping banks in full control of compliance, identity, and settlement.

Participants include Lloyds Bank, NatWest, NAB, Societe Generale, ANZ, HSBC, JPMorgan, Deutsche Bank, Standard Chartered, and Bank of America, among others.

These are not institutions experimenting at the margins. They collectively process a meaningful share of global retail remittance volume, and their commitment to the framework’s enforceable standards creates a network effect that grows more valuable as more corridors activate.

Bangladesh, China, Germany, India, and Pakistan are among the top 10 countries globally in remittance receipts. Activating corridors into those markets first is not accidental.

SWIFT is targeting the routes where the human cost of slow, expensive, and opaque payments is highest, and where the competitive pressure from alternative rails is most acute.

The G20 Timeline

The framework sits within the G20’s broader roadmap to improve cross-border payments by 2027, which sets specific targets across speed, cost, transparency, choice, and access.

SWIFT has aligned its scheme explicitly with that roadmap, giving the initiative political weight that purely commercial payment projects lack.

Central banks and finance ministries in G20 member countries have a direct interest in seeing the targets met, which creates regulatory and institutional support for bank participation that private blockchain payment networks cannot easily replicate.

The June 2026 milestone, when more than 25 banks are expected to be processing live transactions under the framework, will be the first real test of whether the scheme’s enforceable standards hold under production volume.

If they do, SWIFT will have demonstrated something that matters well beyond cross-border payments: that the incumbent financial infrastructure can move fast enough to compete with the rails that were built to replace it.

The post Tokenized Deposits Give Banks All the Blockchain Benefits Without the Crypto Risk — SWIFT Is Making It Happen appeared first on ccn.com.

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