Europe’s financial sector is witnessing a rapid transition as major regulators, banks, and infrastructure providers ramp up their focus on tokenization. Several fresh initiatives reveal a region-wide commitment to integrating digital assets into core financial systems, signaling a broader shift in how traditional markets are approaching distributed ledger technology and tokenized products.
Regulators move closer to digital finance
A director at the European Central Bank (ECB) recently highlighted tokenization as one of the most transformative changes in finance, describing its impact as being unmatched by previous technological shifts. The director pointed to the ability of tokenization to reframe not just one segment, but the underlying logic of entire financial systems. This reflects a growing determination among policymakers in Europe to address tokenization as a mainstream structural issue rather than seeing it as a marginal subject.
Further reflecting this shift, the United Kingdom government changed its approach to stablecoins and now plans to bring them under the country’s existing payments regulatory framework. This reversal from earlier policy stands to give fintech firms and banks greater legal clarity and predictability as they explore or expand digital payment and settlement services.
Bringing stablecoins into regulated payments could ease legal friction and foster more real-world pilots. By clarifying the rules, UK authorities may support more market activity as firms test and launch compliant digital asset products.
Finance is entering its tokenized era.
Banks test new settlement systems
Large European banks are also accelerating digital asset pilots. HSBC completed a pilot using its Tokenised Deposit Service on the Canton network, simulating issuance, transfer, and atomic settlement of tokenized deposits. This initiative examined how deposits can move swiftly, securely, and with reduced settlement risk via distributed ledger technology.
Atomic settlement, which enables simultaneous exchange of funds and assets, remains a key focus in these experiments. The approach has the potential to streamline traditional models and reduce operational delays—an area many banks are closely analyzing as they consider new payment systems.
Meanwhile, ABN Amro, a leading Dutch bank, expanded access to digital asset exposure for its clients. The bank now provides indirect exposure to crypto markets through exchange traded products and capital protected notes, all integrated within existing investment channels. This lets clients access digital markets through familiar and regulated structures, without needing to manage tokens directly.
ABN Amro mainly targets mainstream investors who want exposure to crypto-linked assets while staying within a traditional regulatory perimeter.
Traditional infrastructure links with digital assets
A new partnership between Ondo, Clearstream, and 360X marks a further step in linking digital assets with established European financial infrastructure. Clearstream, recognized as one of the largest securities depositories in Europe, will offer custody, settlement, and collateralization services for tokenized stocks and ETFs issued by Ondo. This move could help large institutional investors adopt tokenized assets more seamlessly, using infrastructure already trusted for conventional securities.
By providing institutional-grade workflows and integrating with regulated platforms, the partnership aims to reduce fragmentation and operational hurdles in digital asset adoption. Many banks and asset managers already depend on Clearstream’s systems for core processes, making it possible to incorporate new tokenized offerings into familiar routines.
Ondo Finance, active in building tokenized financial products, and Clearstream’s collaboration illustrates how traditional financial operators in Europe are starting to work with blockchain-native firms to expand market reach. Both established and emerging players are engaging in live pilots and partnerships, reflecting Europe’s accelerating movement into tokenized finance.




