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Exchanges & Companies18h ago

State Street Goes Full Onchain: Banks Race to Tokenize Everything That Isn't Bolted Down

State Street is going full degen on tokenization, announcing plans to build tokenized money-market funds, exchange-traded funds, and cash instruments like tokenized deposits and stablecoins. This move builds on the custody bank’s existing role servicing crypto markets, where it already handles administration and accounting for crypto ETFs and has signaled 2026 plans to expand into digital-asset custody.

Rather than launching crypto-native vehicles, State Street is positioning tokenization as a familiar upgrade to traditional investment structures. The bank plans to collaborate with institutional money managers and clients, leveraging its asset-management arm, which recently partnered with Galaxy Digital on a tokenized private liquidity fund.

The push comes as custodial banks accelerate efforts to digitize cash itself. Earlier this month, BNY Mellon activated a tokenized deposit service designed for payments, collateral, and margin use, creating blockchain-based representations of bank deposits that remain direct liabilities of the issuing bank rather than stablecoins.

Other top asset managers are making similar moves. This week, Franklin Templeton updated two institutional money-market funds to support blockchain-based settlement and ownership records, allowing traditional cash vehicles to plug into tokenized and regulated stablecoin frameworks without changing how the funds are managed or regulated.

State Street has previously pointed to rising institutional demand for these changes. In an October 2025 research report, the bank said nearly 60% of institutional investors planned to increase digital-asset exposure, with many expecting meaningful portions of portfolios to become tokenized over time.