BIS’s tokenization efforts move past the atomic payments prototype stage and into real-value cross-border payments trials.
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Project Agora has demonstrated tokenized cross-border payments across seven central banks and over 40 financial institutions. The Bank of Canada also weighed in on Wednesday, with real value trading set as the next testing milestone. This prototype maintains, rather than replaces, correspondent banking, sanctions screening, and SWIFT compatibility.
BIS’s tokenization efforts move past the atomic payments prototype stage and into real-value cross-border payments trials. The Bank for International Settlements confirmed the move on Wednesday.
Project Agora, a public-private collaboration between seven central banks and over 40 financial institutions, has demonstrated that tokenized commercial bank deposits can be settled with tokenized central bank reserves on a shared platform with cross-jurisdictional finality.
Why BIS tokenization prototypes are important for global banks
The prototype demonstrated atomic settlement, where all legs of a cross-border transaction are settled at the same time or not at all. The design will reduce correspondent transactions that currently take days to seconds, the banks involved said.
“Once you know you have everything to execute a trade, you can close it in one go,” BIS Deputy General Manager Andrea Mechler said in comments accompanying the release. On Wednesday, the Bank of Canada also joined the project.
Project Agora participants include the Bank of England, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the Bank of Japan, the Bank of France, the Swiss National Bank, the Bank of Mexico, and the Bank of Korea. The International Finance Association convened the private sector.
“This will benefit the entire financial system,” IIF Director Tim Adams said in a statement released alongside the announcement.
How the unified ledger fits into existing payment rails
The prototype preserves correspondent banking rather than replacing it. BIS’s 97-page final report calls correspondent banking the “backbone of global payments” and emphasizes that sanctions review and anti-money laundering controls remain within the system.
That framework is intentional. Project Agora is not built to disintermediate banks, as crypto-native stablecoin networks aim to do, but to provide existing institutions with faster rails that are compatible with SWIFT and ISO 20022. The contrast with the stablecoin corridor is structural.
Smart contracts on the platform allow banks to embed compliance checks, conditional payment triggers, and workflow logic directly into transactions. The report notes that as key efficiencies improve, there will be fewer adjustments, less manual intervention, and lower operational risk.
A separate legal analysis attached to the report found that a final settlement was achievable in all seven participating jurisdictions. Further work is required on technical and contractual requirements tailored to each legal system.
What changes will real-world value testing bring for tokenization?
The next stage will be to go beyond proxy transfers and route actual funds through the prototype, marking the first time a BIS Innovation Hub effort of this scale has moved into actual transactions.
Bank of Canada Senior Deputy Governor Carolyn Rogers said tokenization “has the potential to make these payments faster, cheaper, more efficient and secure,” confirming the central bank’s participation in the next phase of testing.
The timing fits with a broader tokenization shift among Wall Street companies. DTCC plans to develop tokenized payments for stocks, ETFs, and government bonds. Both Nasdaq and ICE are developing blockchain-based systems for tokenized stocks.
Bernstein analysts are calling 2026 a “tokenization supercycle,” with stablecoin supply and demand for on-chain treasuries both increasing toward the end of the year.
The final report on Project Agora is expected to be released in the first half of this year. The mid-2026 update will be the first checkpoint to determine whether real-world value testing holds up at scale.
