State Street is pushing further into tokenization, signaling its belief that the future of institutional finance will be built on blockchain technology—not just traditional back-office systems.
The custody bank said Thursday that it is launching a new suite of tokenized products, as the asset class moves beyond small pilot programs and into real-world use at scale.
In a statement, State Street unveiled its Digital Asset Platform, describing it as secure and scalable infrastructure designed to help institutional clients manage and issue tokenized assets. The firm positioned the platform as a bridge between traditional finance and the growing digital asset economy.
The platform will support a range of core institutional products, including tokenized money market funds, ETFs, other tokenized securities, and cash-based products such as tokenized deposits and stablecoins.
Built for Institutional-Grade Use
Behind the scenes, the platform combines wallet management, custody, and cash services into a single system. It is designed to support tokenized products across multiple jurisdictions and on both private and public permissioned blockchains, while maintaining strong security, compliance, and operational controls.
“This launch marks an important milestone in our digital asset strategy,” said Joerg Ambrosius, president of Investment Services at State Street.
“By combining blockchain connectivity with robust controls and global servicing expertise, we’re giving institutions the confidence to adopt tokenization as part of their core business with a partner they already trust,” he added.
Tokenization Seen Accelerating Through 2030
State Street’s move comes as asset managers, custodians, and exchanges race to convert traditional financial products into programmable, blockchain-based versions. The goal is to speed up settlement, cut operational friction, and improve liquidity in markets that still rely heavily on manual processes.
Tokenized cash and tokenized fund shares are increasingly seen as foundational tools institutions want in place before expanding into more complex on-chain strategies.
The bank has been laying the groundwork for this shift for months. In an October report, State Street estimated that by 2030, 10% to 24% of institutional investments could be conducted through tokenized instruments. The firm highlighted private equity and private fixed income as early use cases, given their illiquidity and high administrative costs.



