JPMorgan Chase has highlighted the potential for tokenization and programmable money to reshape the operations of global finance. According to the bank, these technologies could accelerate payments, reduce settlement times to near-instant levels, and enhance efficiency in cross-border transactions.
The significance of tokenization for JPMorgan
In a joint opinion piece, Umar Farooq—Co-Head of Global Payments at JPMorgan—and Peter Muriungi, CEO of Digital Assets and Blockchain Solutions, stressed that blockchain-based financial infrastructure is increasingly vital in a worldwide economy that operates 24/7. They emphasized that as businesses function continuously, traditional financial systems require faster and more flexible solutions.
The executives stated that tokenizing traditional assets such as deposits, bonds, equities, and real estate could minimize friction in payment processes, improve liquidity, and slash settlement times from days to mere seconds.
Farooq and Muriungi underscored that tokenization and programmable money can reduce payment friction, shorten settlement cycles, and deliver efficiency for both companies and consumers.
JPMorgan also stressed that innovation must advance hand in hand with robust regulatory safeguards. The bank noted that stablecoins and tokenized money hold considerable promise, particularly in cross-border payments, but insisted that digital asset service providers adopting bank-like roles should adhere to similar standards regarding capital, liquidity, consumer protection, and regulatory oversight.
Mini glossary: Tokenization means representing real-world or financial assets—such as bonds, deposits, real estate, or commodities—on a blockchain as digital tokens. Programmable money refers to digital currencies that can be programmed to transfer, pay, or settle transactions automatically when specific conditions are met.
Alignment with IMF perspectives
JPMorgan’s assessment closely aligns with recent statements from the International Monetary Fund, which has positioned tokenization as one of the next major advances in finance. The IMF has drawn attention to the transformative potential of tokenization in changing how money and real-world assets move within the global economy.
A technological framework similar to XRPL
The framework described by JPMorgan closely mirrors the technological capabilities of the XRP Ledger (XRPL). Designed for rapid, cost-efficient value transfers, XRPL settles transactions in approximately three to five seconds. The minimal transaction fees—just a fraction of a cent—have made it particularly attractive for cross-border payment scenarios.
Beyond payments, XRPL stands out as a primary platform for tokenizing real-world assets. Financial institutions and developers can directly issue stablecoins, government bonds, commodities, and real estate on the network, allowing for much faster transfers and settlements.
The speed, programmability, efficient settlement structure, and compliance-driven infrastructure offered by XRPL align closely with the elements JPMorgan sees as critical for the future of finance.
Expanding institutional use cases
The network also provides features tailored for institutional use, such as escrow accounts, a built-in decentralized exchange, automated market makers, and permissioned token issuance. These tools enable organizations to automate payments, settlements, and compliance workflows directly on-chain.
Recently, XRPL has placed even greater emphasis on regulatory-compliant stablecoins, permissioned decentralized finance applications, and compliance-focused infrastructure aimed at institutional adoption. This trajectory aligns with JPMorgan’s perspective that blockchain can strengthen the current financial system without undermining regulatory foundations.




