The Bank of England and the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) have unveiled a new framework to explore the use of tokenization in the UK’s financial markets, inviting public feedback on the proposed approach. Tokenization refers to the process of representing real-world assets digitally using blockchain technology. This innovation enables traditional financial instruments to be issued, traded, and settled in more efficient and creative ways across digital platforms.
Vision for economic growth and innovation
Both organizations emphasized in a joint statement that adopting innovative technologies in the financial infrastructure by the public and private sectors could significantly drive economic growth and foster innovation. The regulators also underscored their intention to gather public insight about how current regulations and infrastructure either support or hinder the safe application of tokenization in markets. Stakeholders are invited to provide opinions until July 3.
Highlighting the potential of tokenization to overhaul wholesale markets, the statement noted that the technology could transform how assets are issued, traded, and settled. Widespread adoption could lower costs, reduce risk, and open new avenues for financial service offerings.
Major changes on the horizon for payment systems
The Bank of England is preparing to introduce sweeping changes to payment systems. Notably, starting from September 2027, the settlement window for CHAPS, used for high-value and time-sensitive payments, and the central RTGS payment network will be extended on weekdays until 1:30 am. This shift is designed to better accommodate trading with Asian markets by bridging the time zone gap. Both CHAPS and RTGS are foundational to banking transfers and large-scale financial transactions in the UK.
There are additional plans to enable settlements on Sundays and official holidays before 2029, and to expand weekday transaction hours to a 22-hour continuous window by 2031. The public can submit feedback on these proposals until August 10.
Fund tokenization and stablecoin progress
Last month, the FCA released a policy statement on fund tokenization. According to these new guidelines, blockchain records may now serve as companies’ principal ledger—removing the previous obligation to maintain a separate off-chain transaction record. This development indicates growing confidence in digital record-keeping within the finance industry.
Regulatory authorities have also outlined a provisional roadmap for stablecoin use. The FCA announced it is working on regulatory updates that will allow the use of stablecoins in unit transactions before new crypto regulations take effect in October 2027. Stablecoins are digital assets typically backed by fiat currencies, developed to bring greater price stability to crypto-based payment systems.
These moves underscore the UK’s determination to modernize its financial architecture by integrating blockchain and digital asset solutions more deeply into its infrastructure. Both the Bank of England and FCA are positioning the country to remain competitive as the global financial landscape evolves.
Public consultations on tokenization and payment system modernization reflect a strategy to ensure that regulatory policies keep pace with technological advances while balancing innovation with security and market trust.
Industry experts are watching these proposals closely, noting that the UK’s early and coordinated regulatory efforts may offer the stability and clarity investors and institutions have sought amid the rapid expansion of digital finance.
As new rules and frameworks emerge, market participants are encouraged to engage with regulators to shape a forward-looking and resilient digital ecosystem in the UK.



