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HOME / BRIEFING · EDITION 5 · 2026-05-31
Weekly briefingEdition 5

Week ending 31 May 2026


Hong Kong kept clarifying the institutional wrapper for tokenised securities, and the stablecoin regulatory perimeter moved on three continents.

The 30-second read

17 moves · 4 desks

Payments & settlement

  1. EU
    ECB to extend TARGET hours for 24/7 Pontes DLT settlement

    After a 125-response consultation, the extension unlocks euro cash-leg settlement for tokenised deposits and bonds outside conventional TARGET windows.

  2. US
    SoFi launches the SOFID stablecoin to ~15m members with tokenised-deposit conversion

    FDIC insurance and interest apply only while the asset is held on-platform as a tokenised deposit; off-platform it is a bare stablecoin, the first bank to wire that dual structure at scale.

  3. US
    Mastercard subsidiary granted a NYDFS BitLicense

    Positions Mastercard to transmit and settle directly in stablecoins rather than through third-party licensed intermediaries.

  4. US
    Circle and Nium connect USDC settlement to last-mile payouts across 190+ countries

    Stablecoin settlement plugged into a conventional cross-border payout network.

  5. JP
    SuMi TRUST, JPYC and HashPort let Diners Club points convert to JPYC

    JPYC, the only onshore-regulated yen stablecoin, gains a consumer-facing rail through a non-custodial wallet.

Issuance & funds

  1. KR
    Samsung trio invests $408m in Upbit operator Dunamu, eyeing security tokens and KRW stablecoins

    Samsung Securities will partner on security-token issuance, since exchanges cannot intermediate tokenised securities under Korean law, while Samsung SDS brings its Korea Securities Depository platform contract.

  2. EU
    Hamilton Lane tokenises a Global Private Assets share class via Allfunds and Apex

    BBVA Asset Management, with nearly EUR 200bn under management, is the first investor and holds an exclusive institutional distribution period.

  3. US
    WisdomTree appoints John Whelan as Head of Strategy for Digital Assets

    The former Santander CIB digital-assets lead joins an asset manager unconstrained by Basel crypto rules, with USD 910m already in its WTGXX onchain money-market fund.

Regulatory & licensing

  1. HK
    SFC issues guidance for the uncertificated securities regime

    The book-entry foundation for tokenised shares to count as the legally operative record, aimed at listed issuers and their corporate secretaries.

  2. HK
    FSTB and SFC conclude the virtual-asset advisory and management consultations

    Clarifies the Type 9 and Type 4 licensing perimeter versus the separate VA track for products that straddle both.

  3. US
    FDIC proposes BSA and sanctions rules for GENIUS-Act stablecoin issuers

    Cross-references FinCEN and OFAC, and gives FinCEN a 30-day consultation right before FDIC enforcement, a departure from how bank BSA supervision works.

  4. US
    SEC postpones its stock-tokenisation trading exemption

    Internal friction over corporate actions and anonymous DeFi holding stalls the third-party tokenised-equity exemption.

  5. EU
    ECB resists euro-stablecoin proposals at the Nicosia meeting

    The sovereignty argument leaves a gap that dollar stablecoins may fill in trading, where MiCA's everyday-usage protections do not apply.

Infrastructure & custody

  1. US
    Paxos granted temporary DLT-based clearing-agency registration by the SEC

    The eighth US clearing agency and the first on DLT, on an 18-month temporary basis with launch expected March 2027, covering tokenised equities and bonds.

  2. US
    DTCC adds Stellar as a second public chain for its tokenisation service

    Follows Canton; both are non-EVM despite DTCC's own EVM AppChain, with force-transfer and registered-wallet controls required by the SEC no-action letter.

  3. Global
    Fireblocks launches the Open Transaction Layer standards initiative

    Robinhood, SoFi, Securitize and more than twenty others join; Coinbase, Circle and Tether are notably absent.

The deep dive

Project Agorá publishes: cross-border settlement gets a two-layer blueprint

The BIS Innovation Hub published the Project Agorá prototype report on 27 May, two years into a programme that now spans seven central banks and more than forty financial institutions, including JPMorgan, HSBC, Deutsche Bank, Swift, Mastercard and UBS. The Bank of Canada is joining for the next phase, with more institutions expected. The report matters less for any single number than for the architecture it settles on.

The load-bearing design decision was that central banks would retain full control of their own reserves. That single requirement drove the entire two-layer structure. Tokenised commercial-bank deposits sit on a shared unifying ledger where every participant can coordinate a payment. Tokenised central-bank reserves sit on separate jurisdictional ledgers, one per currency area, each operated under the relevant central bank's own authority. A smart contract called the payment coordinator, deployed on the unifying ledger, sequences the workflow but never directly invokes contracts on the jurisdictional ledgers, and there is no cross-ledger bridge: coordination runs through deterministic events and participant-operated middleware. This is a different model from mBridge, where a single shared platform hosts both central-bank and commercial money.

For an operator, three things stand out. First, the participant set is the major reserve currencies (Banque de France for the Eurosystem, plus the central banks of Japan, Korea, Mexico, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York), and it is wholesale-only, which distinguishes it sharply from mBridge's graduated consortium where retail rails are in scope. Second, the prototype is a prototype: it addressed speed, efficiency, transparency and risk across nine friction areas participants had identified, and found them materially or partially improved, but no real value has settled and no production timeline is stated. The next phase is real-value testing. Third, participation from JPMorgan, HSBC and UBS reads as operational rather than symbolic; all three are balance-sheet committed to the testing phase.

The honest read is that Agorá has now produced the clearest public blueprint for how tokenised cross-border settlement can preserve monetary sovereignty while still settling atomically. It does not replace correspondent banking so much as re-plumb it: the report is explicit that the model preserves the correspondent-banking backbone and applies new technology to its performance. Whether the blueprint becomes infrastructure depends on the real-value phase, and on the governance questions the prototype deliberately left out of scope: the operating entity for the unifying ledger, the rulebook, and liability. For now it is the reference design the rest of the field will be measured against.

Worth watching next

  • Whether the Bank of Canada's entry to Project Agorá widens the real-value phase beyond the original seven currency legs.
  • The SEC's revised stock-tokenisation exemption text, and whether it admits third-party tokens carrying full ownership rights.
  • Kelvin Wong's three post-consultation speeches (bodies not yet in the record) for the SFC's public framing on tokenised secondary markets.

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