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JPMorgan Settles First Transaction on Public Blockchain Using Chainlink and Ondo Finance

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Briefs Finance
Published Nov 24, 2025
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Summary:
  • JPMorgan settled first public blockchain transaction in May via Kinexys division
  • Bank used Chainlink to buy tokenized treasuries on Ondo Finance's public ledger
  • Move signals shift from JPMorgan's private blockchain to public infrastructure as Wall Street embraces tokenization

The Move

JPMorgan ventured beyond its "walled garden" approach Wednesday. The bank announced it settled a transaction on a public blockchain.

JPMorgan partnered with crypto firms Chainlink and Ondo Finance to make it happen.

For years, JPMorgan quietly built its own blockchain technology. It created a private network accessible only to its customers. Now it's connecting to public infrastructure.

How It Worked

In early May, JPMorgan's blockchain division Kinexys transferred money between two accounts on its private blockchain. The transfer settled the purchase of tokenized treasuries on Ondo's public ledger.

Tokenized treasuries are money market funds that live on the blockchain. To trigger the payment, JPMorgan used Chainlink, a communication protocol that lets blockchains process outside information.

For the first time, JPMorgan built out a structure to interface with a public blockchain.

The Significance

"This is not just another POC [proof of concept]," Sergey Nazarov, cofounder of Chainlink, said. "This is the beginning of something big."

The move comes as Wall Street races to tokenize stocks, bonds, and other assets on blockchain. Tokenization lets trades settle instantly rather than waiting until the next business day.

The Tokenization Wave

Big banks like JPMorgan are transforming the financial ecosystem through blockchain. Already, tokenization has brought fundamental changes to how stocks and other assets are traded.

Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev has described tokenization as a "freight train" poised to eat Wall Street.

The current system relies on the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation, which settles trades the next business day. That feels outdated when so much business happens instantly and around the clock.

Who's Already In

JPMorgan offers tokenized private equity assets on its Kinexys blockchain. BlackRock's BUIDL fund offers tokenized money-market funds and U.S. Treasuries via blockchain. It's already grown to $2 billion in assets under management.

Robinhood offers tokenized stocks in Europe. Kraken's tokenized U.S. stocks are doing brisk trade in Brazil and South Africa.

The total value of tokenized assets worldwide was about $660 million as of mid-November, according to RWA.xyz.

The Competitive Push

Big banks face competitive pressure from fintechs and crypto-native firms. That makes engagement with crypto and blockchain a logical step.

Under President Trump's crypto-friendly administration, banks recognize cryptocurrency is no longer a niche. Lawmakers are seeking to pass legislation on stablecoins.

Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan said that if stablecoins become legal, "we will go into that business."

The Benefits

Active traders will appreciate blockchain since it opens the door for more trading after hours and on weekends. Institutional investors can free up collateral that might otherwise be tied up waiting for settlement.

"Imagine you're a hedge fund and want to buy $1 million of Tesla stock," says Johann Kerbrat, SVP of Robinhood Crypto. "You buy it on Friday, so you don't have the money anymore, but you don't get the shares in your account until Monday. So for three days, you can't do anything."

The Concerns

Not everyone thinks a rush to tokenization is good. Citadel Securities asked the SEC to adopt a go-slow approach. The trading giant fears some crypto firms want exemptions from consumer protection obligations.

There have been notable discrepancies between prices of traditional shares and tokenized versions. It's unclear if every firm has adequate guardrails for custody and fiduciary obligations.

What happens if a crypto firm goes bankrupt while holding tokenized shares?

The Bottom Line

JPMorgan's first public blockchain transaction marks a major step in Wall Street's tokenization wave, connecting its private Kinexys chain to public infrastructure as big banks race to enable instant settlement and compete with crypto-native firms reshaping finance.

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