BNY, Goldman Launch Blockchain Solution – Crypto News – Crypto News
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BNY, Goldman Launch Blockchain Solution – Crypto News

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Treasury management is getting a blockchain-based makeover just as the function shoots up the priority list of enterprises.

The news Wednesday (July 23) that BNY and Goldman Sachs are partnering to bring traditional financial instruments like money market funds (MMFs) onto blockchain infrastructure underscores that this shift is not about speculative digital assets or crypto-native DeFi applications. Instead, this movement is firmly rooted in traditional finance (TradFi) as it begins to embrace blockchain not as an ideology but as infrastructure.

“As the financial system transitions toward a more digital, real-time architecture, BNY is committed to enabling scalable and secure solutions that shape the future of finance,” BNY Global Head of Liquidity, Financing and Collateral Laide Majiyagbe said in a statement provided to PMNTS. “Mirrored tokenization of MMF shares is a first step in this transition … as a trusted bridge between traditional finance and emerging technologies.”

The tokenization of money market funds, traditionally considered the sleepiest of instruments, could be a watershed moment for enterprise back-office leaders and one that turns the treasury desk from a static allocator into a dynamic capital engine.

BNY Mellon’s clients, primarily institutional treasurers managing tens of billions in working capital, will now be able to hold MMF shares in tokenized form, enabling near-instantaneous transfers and potential atomic settlement alongside other tokenized assets.

These tokenized shares will not live in the usual siloed databases but instead be recorded and transferred using distributed ledger technology (DLT), improving settlement speeds, enhancing transferability and reducing administrative friction.

Goldman Sachs’ DLT infrastructure, already powering its internal digital asset platform GS DAP, will now underpin a crucial segment of treasury management for BNY clients — a development that signals both institutional confidence in blockchain rails and an emerging competitive standard.

The timing of BNY and Goldman’s announcement is no accident.

Read more: Wall Street Moves On-Chain as Tokenization of US Stocks Goes Global 

Regulatory Momentum Is Catalyst for Blockchain Financial Services

The partnership between BNY and Goldman is not just about faster transactions; it’s about programmable liquidity and a treasury function that increasingly operates in real time.

And it’s happening against a backdrop of pro-crypto regulatory momentum and interest from the traditional financial sector and that sector’s largest clients. On Tuesday (July 22), an initial discussion draft and the request for information on the U.S. crypto markets CLARITY Act that was passed by the House last week were released by Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina, Sen. Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming, Sen. Bill Hagerty of Tennessee and Sen. Bernie Moreno of Ohio.

“Banks are in the state where they are thinking about blockchains as public infrastructure that they need to rely on,” Chainalysis Co-founder and CEO Jonathan Levin said in an interview with PYMNTS CEO Karen Webster published April 7. “Without a federal framework, it is incredibly difficult for financial services firms and international enterprises to really get comfortable.”

The CLARITY Act, if signed into law, would provide a much-needed legal framework for the tokenization of assets and the movement of value across blockchain infrastructure and on-chain financial environments. Already, the U.S. has signed into law the first tangible piece of successful crypto policy, the GENIUS Act which came into effect Friday (July 18).

The rest of the financial landscape isn’t standing still, either.

PNC Bank and Coinbase on Tuesday announced they have partnered to develop a solution that will allow the bank’s clients to buy, hold and sell cryptocurrencies, as well as other crypto financial solutions. A week earlier, on July 16, blockchain company Ripple launched a partnership with tokenization infrastructure platform Ctrl Alt.

See also: What Treasury Teams Can Learn From Central Banks’ Tokenization Projects

Understanding the Shape of Tomorrow’s Enterprise Treasury Stack

To the untrained eye, these are back-end infrastructure changes. But to corporate treasurers managing billions in liquidity across multinational operations, they may amount to a redesign of the capital stack.

Tokenized MMFs, for example, held and transacted on blockchain, can be exchanged instantly, regardless of banking hours. This enables treasurers to manage liquidity in real time, reduce idle cash balances and integrate MMFs into programmable treasury workflows — something not possible with legacy fund structures.

Moreover, atomic settlement, where two sides of a transaction settle simultaneously, reduces counterparty risk and unlocks use cases like real-time collateral swaps or intraday repo.

Perhaps the biggest value proposition lies in interoperability. Tokenized MMFs can be paired with tokenized cash, Treasuries, and commercial paper — allowing treasurers to compose portfolios that settle in seconds, automate allocations via smart contracts, and rebalance exposure with unprecedented agility.

For instance, a global firm could use smart contracts to automatically move idle cash into tokenized MMFs when yield spreads cross a threshold, or collateralize tokenized commercial paper in real time for intraday liquidity needs.

This convergence is key for CFOs looking to optimize yield and liquidity simultaneously, particularly in volatile macro environments. Of course, this isn’t risk-free. Treasury professionals will need to weigh the benefits of speed and programmability against emerging challenges.

At the same time, integrating blockchain-based assets with legacy treasury management systems (TMS) remains a hurdle. Bridging old and new infrastructure requires new middleware, retraining teams and ensuring interoperability between platforms.

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