Key Highlights
JPMorgan arranges one of the first U.S. commercial paper issuances on a public blockchain.
Galaxy’s USCP sale settles in USDC, with Coinbase and Franklin Templeton participating.
Solana’s expanding institutional footprint reflects a major shift toward on-chain capital markets.
JPMorgan, a global financial service firm, today announced that it has arranged one of the first U.S. commercial paper issuances on a public blockchain, executing the deal on Solana for Galaxy Digital. Coinbase and Franklin Templeton purchased the tokenized debt, marking a rare instance of regulated securities issued and settled entirely on-chain.
The bank created the USCP token, handled delivery-versus-payment settlement, and confirmed that issuance and redemption will occur in USDC. JPMorgan said the deal shows that blockchain can modernize markets while maintaining existing regulatory and settlement standards.
Key features of the deal
In the official release, JPMorgan’s Scott Lucas said that the deal showcases “institutional appetite for digital assets” and the bank’s ability to safely arrange new instruments on Solana. Galaxy called the issuance its first commercial paper offering, designed to expand short-term funding channels and give institutional buyers access to blockchain-based money-market instruments.
Sandy Kaul, Franklin Templeton’s head of innovation, added that institutions are “no longer just experimenting with blockchain, we’re transacting on it in a big way,” emphasizing growing comfort with on-chain financial instruments.
Solana’s expansion into institutional finance
The issuance follows a string of Solana-aligned institutional developments. Earlier today, Coinbase launched native Solana DEX trading for millions of tokens, enabling direct on-chain execution and USDC settlement. On December 6, RWA-focused Plume deployed institutional-grade treasury and credit vaults on Solana, positioning the chain as a preferred venue for tokenized yield.
Solana Foundation’s Nick Ducoff said JPMorgan’s transaction validates Solana’s architecture for high-volume settlement, noting that public-chain transparency and sub-second finality are becoming essential for real-world financial operations.
At the time of publishing, Solana (SOL) was trading near $133.85, down 2.84%, with a 24-hour trading volume of $6.63 billion, as per CoinMarketCap data.
Institutions’ blockchain adoption
Across the broader market, institutional blockchain adoption is accelerating. Circle recently introduced USDCx, a privacy-enabled stablecoin designed for banks and asset managers.
Meanwhile, German automaker BMW adopted JPMorgan’s Kinexys blockchain for automated FX treasury flows, replacing manual bank transfers with programmable rules. Visa is also expanding stablecoin support as cross-border blockchain payments climb.
These developments reflect a structural shift: traditional finance is increasingly using public and hybrid blockchains for settlement, liquidity, and automation use cases once limited to crypto-native firms.
JPMorgan’s on-chain commercial paper deal on Solana signals that capital markets are moving from tests to full-scale blockchain issuance. With USDC settlement and institutional custody validated, more issuers are likely to follow as public chains gain regulatory traction and tokenized money-market products become standard financial infrastructure.
Also read: Ondo, State Street, and Galaxy Unveil Tokenized Liquidity Fund








