Tokenized Deposits vs. Stablecoins: A Practical Guide for Banks and Credit Unions

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For U.S. bank executives, the era of regulatory ambiguity regarding digital assets effectively ended in July 2025. The signing of the GENIUS Act established a federal framework for payment stablecoins, transitioning them from speculative instruments into regulated financial infrastructure.

Combined with the Rescission of SAB 121 and updated guidance from the OCC, FDIC, and Federal Reserve, a new reality has emerged. In 2026, the question is no longer if blockchain will integrate with banking. The question is how regional and community banks will protect their deposit franchises against 24/7, programmable, global competitors.

Banks and credit unions — not fintech platforms — are the logical providers of these services. As trusted, regulated institutions, they are best positioned to offer primary digital asset accounts to Americans.

The Instrument Gap: Stablecoins vs. Tokenized Deposits

To lead this transition, executives must understand the structural differences between the two primary instruments:

Stablecoins are issued by non-bank entities under the GENIUS Act, and are backed 1-to-1 by high-quality liquid assets like U.S. Treasury bills. Crucially, they function as bearer instruments, much like physical cash or travellers' checks. Possession of the digital token equates to ownership. They settle instantly on public or private blockchains, 24/7, without relying on the Federal Reserve’s window. “Non-reserve settlement” is the primary way they increase speed in transactions over traditional payments.

Tokenized Deposits are commercial bank money and in almost every respect just like regular deposits, except on a blockchain. They are digital representations of a deposit liability held at a federally insured institution. Unlike stablecoins, they are account-based, not bearer instruments. They effectively function like a faster, programmable version of ACH or wire transfers, recording ownership on a ledger that the bank controls.

Evolutionary Scale: Stablecoins Survive in the Wild, While Tokenized Deposits are Just Beginning

The most overlooked distinction between these instruments is their 'battle-readiness.' Stablecoins are no longer a theory; they exist 'in the wild' today with a total supply exceeding $310 billion as of January 2026. They have survived multiple 'crypto winters' and settled tens of trillions in transaction volume. Their utility is proven because they operate outside the traditional bank reserve settlement system, enabling transactions to move in seconds rather than days. By contrast, tokenized deposits remain largely in pilot phases. While their theoretical value is clear, they have yet to achieve the global scale or 'always-on' liquidity that stablecoins currently provide. Beyond technology, stablecoins now play a critical strategic role in U.S. fiscal policy and global US dollar dominance. By requiring 100% reserve backing under the GENIUS Act, stablecoin issuers have become massive, price-insensitive buyers of U.S. Treasuries. This helps fund the federal budget deficit — a strategic and political advantage that tokenized deposits, which are primarily used to fund bank lending, do not provide.

Tokenized Deposits Have Three Flavors

It’s easy to be confused by the term “tokenized deposits” today, as it has been used to describe three distinct models, each with different implications for a bank:

1. Intrabank settlement networks (e.g. CUBIX, Signet, SEN)

These move deposits between clients of the same bank. They can be 24/7 because they are just book transfers between clients of the same bank without any reserve settlement. While often branded as "blockchain," these are essentially modern, high-speed databases. They do not require a distributed ledger to function and are widely considered a stretch of the term "tokenized deposit".

2. Intrabank tokenized deposits (e.g. JPMD)

This model also moves liabilities within a single institution without having to perform bank reserve settlement but uses a true blockchain infrastructure.

  • The "Mirror" Effect: Banks place a "mirror" deposit token directly onto a blockchain network, such as Base with JPMD.

  • Utility: This allows for atomic settlement—the simultaneous exchange of the deposit for other tokenized assets like stablecoins or Treasuries—provided both parties are clients of the same bank.

  • The Limit: This model is not currently scalable across different banks; you are effectively "exporting" one bank's liabilities rather than participating in an industry-wide standard.

3. Interbank tokenized deposits

This is a true network where any participating bank can tokenize its own deposits and perform interbank reserve settlement. It enables atomic transactions between different banks' tokenized deposits and other on-chain assets like tokenized treasuries. As of 2026, a production-grade interbank model does not yet exist in the U.S. market. A fundamental constraint remains: interbank transfers still require bank reserve settlement at every hop, just like traditional deposits.

It's worth noting that stablecoins do not have this bank reserve settlement limitation at every hop, which is a key differentiator vs tokenized deposits and a reason why certain segments of the market will opt for stablecoins. It's not as simple as replacing stablecoins with tokenized deposits for banks. Even if true interbank tokenized deposits do end up materializing, banks will still need to develop the capabilities to process stablecoins.

Winning Use Cases for 2026 for Regional and Community Banks and Credit Unions

Banks should deploy tokenized deposits where they offer superior value, while integrating stablecoin rails and digital asset accounts where global reach is required.

Use Case

Description

Retain and grow deposits with digital asset accounts

Remain the center of your customers’ financial life by offering Bitcoin, stablecoin and other digital asset accounts at the bank.

Send and receive stablecoins directly inside digital banking

Retain and grow your deposits through secure and compliant stablecoin offerings directly alongside traditional rails.

Grow interest and fee income with digital asset backed loans

Put deposits to work on crypto-backed, over-collateralized loans with attractive spreads and low expected loss.

Supercharge your deposits with tokenization

Tokenized deposits offer the speed and cost benefits of stablecoins while retaining deposit treatment, including FDIC insurance.

The Cost of Inaction

The market is moving faster than many boardrooms realize. A recent EY-Parthenon survey found that 54% of institutional non-users plan to adopt stablecoins within the next 6 to 12 months. Citi predicts the market for these digital instruments could reach $4 trillion by 2030.

If regional and community banks do not provide these 24/7 programmable rails, clients will move their deposits to institutions that do — whether that is a money-center bank like Citi or a fintech utilizing a GENIUS-regulated stablecoin.

A Roadmap for the CEO

Success in 2026 does not require a "rip and replace" of core banking systems. The path forward is integration, not reinvention:

  1. Assess Your Rails: Determine if your current infrastructure can support digital assets and 24/7 liquidity. If not, you are vulnerable to deposit flight and relationship disintermediation.

  2. Partner for Speed: Building proprietary blockchain technology is capital-intensive and slow. Partner with regulated infrastructure providers who can overlay tokenization capabilities onto your existing core.

  3. Leverage the Franchise: You possess what stablecoin issuers do not: FDIC insurance, the ability to pay interest, and deep credit relationships.

The GENIUS Act leveled the playing field, but it also blew the whistle for kickoff. The technology is no longer "future state." It is the current standard for institutional efficiency. Banks that combine the safety and yield of the traditional model with the speed of the digital model will own the next decade of commercial banking.

Originally posted in Banking Exchange January 26, 2026