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Wall Street Banks Push Blockchain Into $13T Repo Market

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Wall Street banks are expanding blockchain use across the $13 trillion repo market, a system that provides short-term funding between financial institutions. JPMorgan and other major lenders are testing tokenized repo trades to speed up cash transfers and reduce settlement delays in securities lending.

According to a Bloomberg report, banks like JPMorgan Chase are using blockchain for their repurchase agreements, where they exchange Treasuries for cash overnight. Blockchain minimizes manual operations and provides better tracking of collateral as well as quick transactions.

Tokenized repurchase activities have also gained prominence on networks such as Canton Network, which is supported by JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Citadel Securities, and DRW Holdings.

Tokenized Repo Gains Traction on Wall Street

JPMorgan leads adoption after spending years building blockchain infrastructure for financial markets. The bank has processed about $3 trillion in repo transactions since launch. It now handles hundreds of millions in daily activity, including around $5 billion in internal transfers.

However, this remains small compared with its traditional repo operations, which exceed hundreds of billions.

Eddie Wen of JPMorgan said, “This is one of the applications where a blockchain-based solution makes sense.” Banks now view repo as a practical testing ground for scaling blockchain in real markets. HSBC, Virtu Financial, and Broadridge are also expanding similar systems across global trading desks.

Efficiency Gains Drive Institutional Adoption

Blockchain repo systems cut settlement delays and reduce reliance on intermediaries. Traders can also execute transactions outside normal market hours. Tokenized cash and collateral move instantly once both sides approve trades on shared ledgers.

Sonali Das Theisen of Bank of America said blockchain reduces “distributional friction of capital.” Firms now expect better liquidity management and faster funding cycles. A Broadridge study shows banks could reduce liquidity buffers by up to 17% with partial adoption.

Different blockchain systems still do not connect well, which slows full adoption. They also have not been tested widely during major financial stress events. Because of that, banks and other institutions still rely on traditional systems alongside blockchain to keep operations stable.

Scaling Challenges and Market Transition

Industry players continue developing standards to support wider adoption. The Depository Trust & Clearing Corp has started tokenizing Treasuries and ETFs. Nasdaq and the New York Stock Exchange are also exploring 24-hour trading models that require continuous access to funding.

DRW founder Don Wilson said, “On-chain repo is a really powerful thing.” However, experts warn that incompatible blockchain networks increase operational complexity for banks. As a result, integration costs remain high across global financial institutions.

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