JPMorgan is finally getting with the program. The banking giant just arranged the first U.S. Commercial Paper issuance for Galaxy Digital on the Solana blockchain, something most Wall Street dinosaurs wouldn’t touch with a ten-foot pole.
Completed in December 2025, this deal wasn’t just another boring financial transaction—it was the first serious on-chain debt deal using a public blockchain instead of those cozy private networks banks typically hide behind.
Let’s be real. This is a big deal. The $50 million commercial paper was tokenized as USCP and settled using USDC stablecoin. No intermediaries. No waiting. Just blockchain efficiency at work.
This ain’t your standard paper deal. $50M tokenized, USDC settled, zero middlemen. Pure blockchain magic.
JPMorgan ditched its own Onyx network to play in the public sandbox, and that’s telling. Galaxy Digital wasn’t alone in this blockchain party. Coinbase handled custody and wallet services, while Franklin Templeton stepped up as an investor.
Circle’s USDC greased the wheels for all the cash flows. The whole thing ran on Solana—you know, the blockchain that processes over 2,000 transactions per second. Fast. Efficient. Not your grandfather’s settlement system.
Why Solana? Simple. Low fees. High scalability. Perfect for high-value, time-sensitive transactions that traditional systems handle like molasses in January.
Scott Lucas from JPMorgan says this moves blockchain closer to mainstream finance. No kidding. Jason Urban at Galaxy thinks public blockchains actually improve capital markets. Revolutionary concept, right?
The timing couldn’t be better for Galaxy, which reported a record $629 million adjusted EBITDA for Q3 2025. Their first commercial paper issuance opens doors to institutional investors via blockchain money-markets.
For JPMorgan, this follows their JPM Coin launch on Base chain last month. They’re doubling down on tokenization. For Solana, it’s validation. While Bitcoin maintains market dominance of approximately 62.7%, altcoins like Solana offer technological innovations that attract traditional finance players. The blockchain the big banks avoided is now hosting Wall Street transactions. This move signifies a major shift towards integrating blockchain technology in traditional finance. The deal could potentially lead to cost reductions of 50% compared to traditional financial infrastructure.
The message is clear: public blockchains aren’t just for crypto bros anymore. Traditional finance is coming to play. And they’re bringing the big money with them.