Two of the UK’s largest financial institutions moved simultaneously on Wednesday to integrate blockchain rails into their core settlement infrastructure, signaling a shift from experimental pilots to commercial application.
Lloyds Banking Group (LLOY) confirmed it successfully purchased a government bond (gilt) using tokenized deposits on the Canton Network. The transaction, executed through digital asset broker Archax, marks the first time a UK government security has been settled using bank-issued tokens on a public blockchain.
Lloyds stock held steady at 100.30p (+0.99%) following the announcement.
The Plumbing: Canton Network & Archax
Unlike previous private ledger tests, this transaction utilized the Canton Network, a privacy-enabled blockchain designed to interconnect regulated financial markets. Lloyds issued the tokenized deposit directly on-chain, which was then transferred to Archax to settle the gilt purchase.
The move addresses a critical inefficiency in traditional settlement: the T+2 (two-day) lag. By tokenizing both the cash (deposit) and the asset (gilt), the bank achieved atomic settlement, where the exchange of assets happens instantly and simultaneously, eliminating counterparty risk.
"This transaction demonstrates how tokenisation can bring traditional instruments such as Gilts into the digital ecosystem," Lloyds noted in its statement.
Barclays Enters the Stablecoin Stack
In a parallel development, Barclays (BARC) announced its first strategic investment in a stablecoin infrastructure firm, acquiring a stake in U.S.-based settlement company Ubyx.
While Lloyds focused on asset settlement, Barclays’ move targets the interoperability of digital cash. Ubyx operates a clearing network designed to let banks and fintechs redeem distinct stablecoins at par value, effectively treating them as interchangeable liabilities rather than siloed tokens.
The investment aligns with the "Regulated Liability Network" thesis, the idea that commercial bank money and stablecoins must interoperate on shared ledgers to prevent liquidity fragmentation. Barclays joined a seed round that previously included Galaxy Ventures and Coinbase Ventures.
Both moves underscore a specific trend: TradFi is no longer building "crypto" products for retail speculation, but re-platforming backend settlement on distributed ledgers to reduce capital costs.