J.P. Morgan arranges a $50 million tokenized corporate bond issuance for Galaxy on Solana as demand for on-chain financial instruments rises.
JP Morgan has moved deeper into tokenised finance after issuing a $50 million on-chain commercial paper for Galaxy Digital.
The bank set up the bond on the Solana blockchain and oversaw the creation of the on-chain token that represents the debt. Galaxy structured the instrument, and settlement took place in USDC.
The deal is important because it is one of the earliest large commercial paper issuances on a public blockchain in the United States.
The bond was issued as a tokenized short-term corporate instrument. For context, commercial paper normally relies on traditional settlement systems.
This deal shifted the playing field and moved the full structure onchain.
J.P. Morgan created the blockchain representation of the debt. It then handled the settlement of the primary issuance through USDC. This way, using a stablecoin allowed the parties to clear the transaction without delays tied to bank wires.
JP Morgan tokenizes bond on Solana networ | source: X
Franklin Templeton and Coinbase purchased the tokens. Notably, Franklin Templeton already runs a tokenized money market fund, so the firm has experience managing blockchain-based financial products.
Coinbase acted as both an investor and a wallet provider.
The setup gave the deal a simple flow. Galaxy created the structure, J.P. Morgan arranged and built the token, while Coinbase and Franklin Templeton received the tokens and handled custody.
Tokenization continues to grow as more financial players test new ways to issue and settle real-world assets.
Analysts expect the market for tokenised assets to expand to hundreds of billions of dollars over the next several years. Some research groups even believe it could rise to trillions by the early 2030s.
Notably, the Tokenised commercial paper offered lower costs. It also shortens settlement times because fewer intermediaries sit between the issuer and the investor.
Once the bond is onchain, transfers and redemptions follow programmed rules. This way, issuers gain speed andwhile investors gain clarity and better tracking.
The trend has gained support from regulators. SEC Chairman Paul Atkins recently spoke about tokenisation as a field that could reshape parts of the financial system.
Related Reading: Bhutan Launches Gold-Backed TER Stablecoin On The Solana Network
USDC was a major part of this deal between J.P. Morgan, Galaxy, and the two investors. Circle designed the stablecoin to maintain a one-to-one value with the United States dollar.
That stability was what made it useful for settlement.
Additionally, USDC moves across blockchains faster than bank transfers. It also offers finality once it reaches the wallet of the recipient. That design helps reduce operational overhead during redemption and repayment events.
The tokenization shows openness and programmability | source: X
Coinbase and Franklin Templeton both have long experience using USDC. Their systems already support the stablecoin, which helped smoothen the transaction.
Using a public network like Solana also allowed the entire process to operate on transparent infrastructure.
Going forward, the Galaxy issuance shows why tokenisation continues to grow. Solana provided fast settlement and low transaction costs, while USDC allows instant payment. JP Morgan handled the structure through its existing systems and both Franklin Templeton and Coinbase participated through on-chain wallets.
This model shows that all firms had clear incentives. They gained precision, faster timelines and programmable settlement features that traditional rails do not offer.
The post JP Morgan Tokenizes $50 Million In Commercial Papers On The Solana Blockchain appeared first on Live Bitcoin News.
