
JPMorgan Chase is preparing to deepen its blockchain strategy after announcing plans to integrate its deposit token, JPM Coin (JPMD), with the Canton Network through a phased rollout scheduled across 2026.
The move is designed to connect traditional bank-issued digital money with institutional-grade public blockchain infrastructure, strengthening real-time settlement and liquidity capabilities for regulated financial markets.
The integration will allow JPM Coin to operate natively on Canton, enabling institutions on the network to issue, transfer, and redeem the token almost instantly. By running directly within Canton’s synchronized environment, transactions can occur with shared logic and data while maintaining strict privacy and compliance controls.
This approach removes the need for fragmented reconciliation between systems, a longstanding friction point in institutional payments and post-trade settlement.
Canton is a public, permissionless layer-1 blockchain purpose-built for regulated finance. Unlike retail-focused blockchains, it emphasizes configurable privacy, identity controls, and regulatory compatibility, features critical for large financial institutions.
Major banks and financial firms already active in the Canton ecosystem include Goldman Sachs, BNP Paribas, and HSBC, positioning the network as a shared settlement layer for institutional markets rather than a consumer payments rail.
This deployment marks the second blockchain network to support JPM Coin. The token first expanded beyond internal JPMorgan systems in November 2025, when it launched on Base, an Ethereum Layer 2 network.
By adding Canton, Kinexys, JPMorgan’s blockchain and digital payments division, is reinforcing a multichain strategy that allows clients to access bank-issued digital deposits across different blockchain environments without being locked into a single network.
JPMorgan frames the Canton integration as a way to merge the safety of commercial bank money with the always-on functionality of blockchain infrastructure. For institutions, this could mean faster settlement cycles, improved liquidity management, and more efficient capital deployment across trading, collateral, and payment workflows.
As regulated financial institutions increasingly experiment with tokenized assets and on-chain settlement, JPM Coin’s expansion to Canton signals growing confidence that public blockchains, when designed for compliance, can operate at the core of global financial plumbing rather than at its edges.

