The post JPMorgan Arranges Solana Debt-Deal for Galaxy Digital with Coinbase and Franklin Templeton As Investors appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
JPMorgan has accelerated its tokenization bid for real-world assets (RWA) through the Solana (SOL) blockchain. The behemoth bank announced on Thursday that it successfully facilitated a debt issuance for Galaxy Digital Holdings on Solana.
According to the announcement, JPMorgan arranged the first U.S. Commercial Paper (USCP) issuance for Galaxy Digital. The debt issuance was settled through Circle’s USDC by Coinbase Global Inc. and Franklin Templeton.
“Today’s transaction is an important step toward understanding the role blockchain will play in the future of financial markets. This trade demonstrates institutional appetite for digital assets and our capability to securely bring new instruments on-chain using Solana,” Scott Lucas, Head of Markets Digital Assets, JPMorgan, said .
JPMorgan Accelerates Crypto Adoption Via Solana and Coinbase
In the past year, JPMorgan has accelerated its adoption of digital assets and blockchain technology, fueled by the clear crypto regulations under President Donald Trump. The bank launched a token dubbed JPM Coin (JPMD) on the Coinbase-backed Base chain last month.
The bank’s issuance of a USCP on the Solana network will heavily influence its institutional confidence. Furthermore, Solana needs more institutional investors seeking to explore tokenization of real-world assets (RWA) to build their products on its infrastructure.
“This issuance marks a major step in bringing the security and efficiency of public blockchains to institutional finance. Solana’s architecture makes it possible for firms like JPMorgan to arrange financial transactions with the trust and performance the market has always needed,” Nick Ducoff, Head of Institutional Growth, Solana Foundation, noted.
Ultimately, the rising adoption of
Solana
by traditional financial markets will catalyze its midterm growth, especially amid the ongoing macro crypto bull market.
