- •Chainlink and UBS have launched a pilot allowing banks to interact with tokenized investment funds via Swift, bridging traditional finance and blockchain.
- •The solution uses Chainlink’s Runtime Environment to process subscriptions and redemptions on-chain, enabling seamless integration without overhauling existing systems.
Chainlink has taken a major step toward bridging traditional finance and blockchain technology, unveiling a solution that allows banks to interact with tokenized investment funds using the Swift messaging system. This development aims to unlock the benefits of blockchain for the global fund industry, which manages assets exceeding $100 trillion.
The pilot, conducted in collaboration with UBS, leverages Chainlink’s Runtime Environment (CRE) to process subscriptions and redemptions for tokenized funds using ISO 20022 messages, the international standard for financial messaging.
By integrating blockchain workflows directly with UBS’s existing systems, CRE can trigger fund operations on-chain in real-time. This approach allows institutions to access blockchain infrastructure without overhauling their existing operational tools, a critical factor in encouraging adoption across a traditionally cautious industry.
According to Chainlink, the CRE acts as a bridge: it receives Swift messages from banks and initiates the corresponding blockchain actions through the Chainlink Digital Transfer Agent. This seamless interoperability reduces friction and ensures that traditional financial operations can coexist with decentralized technology, creating a framework that could redefine how institutional investors interact with tokenized assets.
The UBS pilot builds on previous initiatives, including Project Guardian, a tokenization effort led by Singapore’s central bank. It also follows a separate Chainlink pilot involving 24 global banks and infrastructure providers such as DTCC and Euroclear. That project demonstrated the ability to use Chainlink’s tools and AI to extract and standardize data from corporate action announcements—an operation that currently costs the financial industry roughly $58 billion annually.
Experts see this latest pilot as a milestone for the adoption of blockchain in institutional finance. By enabling banks to process transactions on-chain via familiar messaging systems, the solution addresses one of the biggest barriers to blockchain adoption: operational complexity.
Institutions no longer need to overhaul internal workflows or build specialized blockchain infrastructure from scratch; instead, they can interact with tokenized funds using the same systems they already trust.
Chainlink’s move signals growing institutional interest in blockchain’s potential to improve efficiency, transparency, and security in fund management. As tokenization initiatives expand, solutions like CRE could reshape the $100+ trillion global fund industry, bridging the gap between legacy financial systems and the emerging blockchain ecosystem.
While still in its pilot stage, the partnership between Chainlink and UBS highlights the evolving landscape of decentralized finance, showing that blockchain and traditional banking can not only coexist but enhance each other. If successful, such integrations may become standard practice, opening the door for broader adoption of tokenized funds worldwide.

