London Stock Exchange Announces Establishment of "Digital Securities Custody" Platform: Supporting On-Chain Settlement of Tokenized Bonds, Stocks, and Private Assets

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London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) announces the development of a “Digital Securities Depository” to support on-chain settlement of tokenized bonds, stocks, and private assets, aiming for initial delivery by 2026. Major UK financial institutions such as Barclays, Standard Chartered, and others have expressed support.

(Background: UK selects HSBC Orion to issue on-chain government bonds, launching a blockchain trial for a £2.5 trillion market)

(Additional context: UK abandons taxing DeFi stablecoins as “not taxable anymore,” Aave founder: DeFi users’ great victory)

Table of Contents

  • What makes LSEG Digital Securities Depository different
  • Settlement pain points: two days equal a century
  • The real battleground of tokenization is not Bitcoin
  • Between anticipation and skepticism

London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) was founded in 1801. Over the past three centuries, it has witnessed the advent of steam engines, telegraphs, electronic trading, and high-frequency algorithms. With each technological revolution, it has found its place.

Now, it plans to do it again.

This week, LSEG announced the construction of a blockchain-based settlement service called the “LSEG Digital Securities Depository,” targeting institutional investors. This system will support trading and settlement of tokenized bonds, stocks, and private market assets, compatible with multiple blockchain networks, while maintaining interoperability with existing traditional settlement infrastructure. The first phase aims for delivery in 2026, pending regulatory approval.

Following the announcement, major UK financial institutions such as Barclays, Lloyds Bank, NatWest Markets, Standard Chartered, and Brookfield Asset Management quickly expressed support.

What makes LSEG Digital Securities Depository different

LSEG is not starting from scratch. It already operates a blockchain platform on Microsoft Azure for private equity funds, and this digital securities depository is an extension of its existing strategy.

The support list includes not just a few pilot institutions, but core players in the UK financial system: it’s rare to see both Barclays and Standard Chartered backing a crypto-related initiative simultaneously.

The key difference lies in its positioning. LSEG is not building an independent “crypto trading platform,” but rather a bridge—connecting traditional securities markets with blockchain networks for settlement. Its target clients are not retail investors or crypto natives, but institutional investors managing trillions of dollars who have long been troubled by the inefficiencies of current settlement systems.

Settlement pain points: two days equal a century

Why are institutions eager for on-chain settlement? The answer is T+2.

In traditional securities markets, a trade takes about two business days (T+2) to settle after execution. This means if you buy stock on Monday, it’s not truly yours until Wednesday. During these two days, both parties face counterparty default risk, and the system relies on multiple intermediaries—central securities depositories, clearinghouses, custodian banks—to ensure smooth operation.

This system has operated for decades, very stable but also costly. Each intermediary charges fees, and every step adds delays and risks. It’s estimated that global securities settlement costs hundreds of billions of dollars annually.

Blockchain promises to compress T+2 into near real-time. LSEG’s DiSH (Digital Settlement House) platform goes further, claiming support for 24/7 settlement, across time zones and multiple payment methods.

If realized, this vision could significantly reduce settlement costs and eliminate the headache of time zone differences in cross-border transactions.

The true battleground of tokenization is not Bitcoin

It’s worth pondering that when crypto circles talk about “tokenization,” they often mean bringing real-world assets onto the chain (RWA) to generate more yield in DeFi protocols. But LSEG sees the opposite logic: using blockchain technology to upgrade traditional asset infrastructure, rather than turning traditional assets into crypto toys.

This difference in approach determines who holds the narrative. In LSEG’s world, blockchain is a tool, not an ideology. It doesn’t need a “decentralization” narrative to justify itself; it only needs to be faster, cheaper, and more reliable.

For crypto purists, this might seem like a “betrayal”—using our technology but abandoning our spirit. But for the market, this is likely the most feasible path for large-scale adoption: not overthrowing traditional finance, but being absorbed by it.

Between anticipation and skepticism

LSEG’s plan sounds promising, but several practical constraints must be acknowledged.

First, regulatory approval is still pending. The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has been cautious about crypto-related activities. Whether LSEG’s system will be approved depends on how it handles AML and KYC compliance.

Second, “compatibility with multiple blockchains” sounds easy but is extremely difficult. Cross-chain interoperability remains an unsolved challenge in the crypto-native world. Achieving this at an institutional level involves high technical hurdles.

Third, competitors won’t wait. SIX Digital Exchange in Switzerland is already operating a digital asset trading platform, and Singapore and Hong Kong are actively developing their own. If LSEG moves too slowly, its first-mover advantage could quickly be eroded.

Nevertheless, the fact that “London Stock Exchange Group is seriously working on this” is itself a signal. Blockchain technology no longer needs crypto enthusiasts to endorse it; one of the oldest financial institutions is voting with real capital.

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