The UK is taking a big step in modernising its payment rails. A new initiative is testing tokenised commercial bank deposits with backing from major banks.
The project aims to explore faster settlement, reduce fraud, and streamline key financial processes. It is scheduled to run through mid-2026 and will bring real transactions under live conditions. This move signals growing confidence in programmable money technology for critical financial infrastructure.
According to a press release, UK Finance is leading the effort with partners including Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds, NatWest, Nationwide, and Santander.
The group selected Quant to provide the technology powering tokenised sterling deposits (GBTD). EY and Linklaters will support the initiative with audit and legal frameworks.
Tokenised deposits are digital versions of commercial bank money that keep the same regulatory protection as traditional deposits. They are designed to offer programmability, faster transactions, and fraud prevention tools.
Quant’s platform will integrate with bank ledgers, the Bank of England’s RTGS system, Faster Payments, and Open Banking APIs.
The initiative builds on the first phase of the Regulated Liability Network (RLN) that ran in 2024. Quant’s earlier work focused on interoperability and programmability across systems. The company’s technology will now handle live payments to prove how tokenised deposits function in production environments.
Three areas will be tested to measure economic and operational benefits. Online marketplace payments will be targeted to cut fraud and boost trust between buyers and sellers. Remortgaging will be streamlined to speed up property transactions and reduce conveyancing risks.
Wholesale bond settlement will be trialed to deliver instant delivery-versus-payment (DvP) with a shared liquidity pool. This could cut delays and free up capital currently tied up in clearing and settlement processes.
Quant CEO Gilbert Verdian stated that the project will help build infrastructure for new forms of programmable money. Jana Mackintosh, Managing Director at UK Finance, said the collaboration aims to deliver better payments for customers and businesses while positioning the UK as a leader in tokenised money standards.
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