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BMO, CME and Google Cloud Build Tokenized Cash Rails

BMO, CME and Google Cloud Build Tokenized Cash Rails

BMO is moving deeper into bank-backed tokenized money. The bank said it is working with CME Group and Google Cloud to introduce new 24/7 tokenized cash capabilities that would let institutional clients move value continuously on CME Group’s permissioned network using Google Cloud Universal Ledger, or GCUL.

The announcement is important because it is not centered on a stablecoin. BMO is framing this as regulated, bank-anchored money infrastructure for institutional settlement, margin and collateral workflows, with tokenized deposits later extending the model into broader business payments and treasury use cases.

 

A bank-backed answer to 24/7 margin and settlement

At the heart of the plan is a simple problem: capital markets increasingly run on extended hours, but traditional bank money still moves on legacy schedules. BMO says institutions need infrastructure that can support real-time value transfer for margin calls, trading and settlement, while CME says tokenized cash at CME Clearing could help firms meet margin and settlement obligations in real time instead of waiting for banking cycles.

BMO says its clients will be able to convert dollars into a tokenized instrument for use with margined products at CME Group. That makes the first use case narrower and more practical than a general “tokenized bank money” story: this is about institutional capital-markets plumbing first, not a broad public rollout.

What is actually being launched first

The most immediate product is tokenized cash. BMO says it plans to offer an institutional settlement instrument to mutual BMO and CME clients in the second half of 2026, pending regulatory approval. The eligible users are described as regulated financial services firms operating in capital markets and commercial banking.

That is a key distinction. The tokenized cash product is not described as a general-purpose dollar token for all customers. It is an institutional settlement tool designed for a defined client set, and the launch timing still depends on regulatory approval.

Tokenized cash first, tokenized deposits next

The release separates tokenized cash from tokenized deposits, and that distinction matters. Tokenized cash is the near-term institutional settlement instrument tied to CME-related workflows. Tokenized deposits are presented as the broader next layer, allowing BMO to offer traditional commercial bank funds in digital form to a wider set of BMO clients for B2B payments, treasury movements and programmable cash applications.

In other words, BMO is sequencing the rollout. First comes a more contained institutional settlement use case. Then, if the model works, the same infrastructure could support broader bank-deposit tokenization for corporate money movement beyond clearing and margin.

Why CME Group and Google Cloud matter here

CME Group’s role is not incidental. BMO is the first bank to offer CME Group’s tokenized cash solution on GCUL, and CME says the product is meant to support high-value, real-time settlement needs for institutional participants. That ties the announcement directly to clearing, collateral and margin efficiency rather than to generic blockchain experimentation.

Google Cloud’s role is the infrastructure layer. The release says GCUL is a private, permissioned and programmable distributed ledger designed to be easier for traditional financial institutions to integrate, manage accounts and assets on, and use for transfers. Google is clearly pitching it as enterprise-ready infrastructure for regulated finance rather than as an open public-chain environment.

What BMO says clients will be able to do

BMO says clients will be able to convert U.S. dollars into tokenized deposits and tokenized cash around the clock. The bank frames that as a way to meet market needs tied to extended trading hours, more continuous operations and the movement of collateral without traditional cutoff constraints.

That is the real commercial pitch. The value here is not only tokenization as a concept. It is eliminating the mismatch between always-on market activity and bank-hour liquidity, especially for institutions that need to fund margin or settle obligations when conventional payment rails are closed.

What this announcement does not say

For all its significance, the release leaves some important questions open. BMO does not disclose pricing, settlement mechanics in detail, client names, balance-sheet treatment, or how large the initial tokenized cash program could be. It also does not say whether the tokenized deposits product has a launch date, only that it establishes groundwork for broader use cases.

The regulatory piece is also unresolved. The tokenized cash launch is explicitly expected in the second half of 2026 only if regulatory approval is obtained. So this is more advanced than a generic pilot narrative, but it is not yet a fully live production program.

Why this matters now

This announcement shows where the next stage of tokenized money is heading in traditional finance. The emphasis is shifting away from public-market narratives around stablecoins alone and toward bank-issued, permissioned instruments that can solve specific institutional settlement and collateral problems.

It also suggests that tokenized deposits may gain traction fastest when they are attached to an existing market structure with real demand, such as CME clearing workflows, rather than launched first as a broad standalone payments product. That sequencing is not stated in those exact words, but it is the clearest implication of how BMO structured the rollout.

Why it matters for crypto

  • It adds another high-profile example of tokenized money moving into regulated capital-markets infrastructure rather than staying confined to crypto-native venues.
  • It strengthens the case for tokenized deposits as a serious institutional alternative to stablecoins in some settlement and treasury workflows.
  • It shows that permissioned ledger infrastructure is still a major part of the tokenization story for large banks, clearing venues and enterprise clients.
  • It suggests the biggest early wins for tokenized bank money may come from margin, collateral and treasury efficiency, not retail payments.

What to watch next

  • Whether BMO secures regulatory approval and launches the tokenized cash product in the second half of 2026 as planned.
  • Whether the bank later publishes more detail on the tokenized deposit roadmap, including client scope and launch timing.
  • Whether other banks join CME Group’s tokenized cash framework on GCUL after BMO’s first-mover role.
  • Whether this model expands beyond margin and settlement into broader corporate treasury and programmable-payment use cases.