
As HSBC, Lloyds, and JPMorgan all commit to tokenized deposits on the Canton Network, Digital Asset Chief Product Officer Bernhard Elsner explains why the instrument is structurally distinct from stablecoins and how Canton’s architecture eliminates bridge risk rather than simply managing it.
Summary
- Tokenized deposits carry the full legal status of a bank deposit, with capital requirements, supervisory oversight, and deposit insurance that stablecoin holders do not receive.
- HSBC completed a tokenized deposit pilot on Canton, Lloyds issued the first tokenized GBP on a public blockchain using Canton, and JPMorgan is bringing JPM Coin to Canton in a phased 2026 rollout.
- Canton’s atomic composability allows tokenized deposits to move across applications without bridge risk, enabling true Delivery versus Payment settlement where the cash leg and securities leg settle simultaneously.
The tokenized deposit market is accelerating. HSBC has completed a pilot simulating the issuance and atomic settlement of its Tokenised Deposit Service on the Canton Network. Lloyds Bank issued tokenized sterling deposits on Canton and used them to purchase a tokenized gilt from Archax. JPMorgan’s Kinexys unit is bringing JPM Coin natively to Canton in a phased integration throughout 2026. Behind all three deals is Digital Asset, the creator of the Canton Network, which as crypto.news reported positions the network as the only public layer one blockchain purpose-built for institutional finance, combining configurable privacy, atomic composability, and regulatory compliance in a single infrastructure layer.
Tokenized Deposits Canton Network Deployments Raise a Core Question: What Makes These Different From Stablecoins?
Bernhard Elsner, Chief Product Officer at Digital Asset, told crypto.news that the distinction is fundamental and drives everything else about how the instrument behaves. “Tokenized deposits are a digital representation of a commercial bank deposit on a blockchain or other DLT platform. Unlike many other digital assets, these tokens are the bank’s own liability to the holder, carrying the same legal status as a pound or dollar sitting in a traditional deposit account,” Elsner said. A stablecoin holder, by contrast, is a creditor of a private issuer with recourse to a pool of reserve assets. A wrapped asset holder relies on the integrity of a wrapper contract plus whatever custody arrangement sits behind it. A tokenized deposit holder is a depositor, with capital requirements, supervisory oversight, KYC and AML inherited from the bank, and in most jurisdictions, deposit insurance. “For institutional cash management, that’s the difference between an instrument you can park working capital in and one you can only route through,” Elsner said. The DTCC has already selected Canton to tokenize US Treasuries, which Elsner describes as turning tokenized deposits into the natural cash leg that enables true atomic Delivery versus Payment between regulated assets and regulated bank money.
Tokenized Deposits and Stablecoins Are Complementary, Not Competing
The distinction between the two instruments does not mean they are adversaries. Elsner is direct on this point: stablecoins optimize for reach and liquidity, while tokenized deposits optimize for balance sheet integrity and regulatory certainty. “Though these assets have different tradeoffs, it’s important to remember that they are complementary to one another,” he said. “We expect to see tokenized deposits leveraged alongside stablecoins and other digital assets as institutions determine which instrument fits which workflow.” Canton’s privacy and native composability are what make this coexistence possible at the infrastructure level. On Canton, a tokenized deposit operates as a direct, regulated bank liability, meaning it is not a wrapped claim, an IOU, or a separate bearer instrument. It never leaves the legal and operational framework it was issued under. That is what gives institutions the confidence to use it for working capital rather than just for routing. As crypto.news has tracked, JPMorgan’s Naveen Mallela described deposit tokens as a “practical, yield-bearing alternative” for institutions that want speed and security without leaving the banking system, a characterization that aligns precisely with what Elsner describes as the instrument’s institutional value proposition.
How Canton Eliminates Bridge Risk Rather Than Managing It
The interoperability question is where Canton’s architecture makes its most commercially significant claim. Elsner frames the absence of interoperability not as a technical inconvenience but as a structural barrier to meaningful scale. “Interoperability is absolutely critical to institutional adoption, otherwise these assets will remain trapped in fragmented silos and unable to reach meaningful scale,” he said. “An asset that cannot move beyond its native platform cannot be financed, reused, or integrated into broader financial workflows.” Most current DvP implementations do not achieve true atomicity, according to Elsner, because settlement typically relies on intermediaries, prefunding, or sequential processes between systems, which introduces latency and residual risk. On Canton, the securities leg and the cash leg can settle in a single atomic transaction across two different applications with no bridge in the middle. “Settlement risk isn’t managed. It’s eliminated at the infrastructure level,” Elsner said. HSBC’s pilot demonstrated exactly this, simulating the atomic settlement of tokenized deposits against other digital assets without the token leaving its issuing institutional framework. As crypto.news documented, Canton processes over $350 billion in tokenized value daily in 2026, with the DTCC, LSEG’s Digital Settlement House, and now JPMorgan all choosing it as their primary settlement infrastructure.
Elsner said he expects tokenized deposits and stablecoins to continue expanding alongside each other as different institutional workflows determine which instrument’s tradeoffs are the better fit.

