
- Swift is launching a blockchain-based shared ledger with Consensys to enable instant, always-on cross-border transactions.
- Swift is leveraging its 50 years of experience providing global financial messaging to offer the same standardization and trust for tokenized assets as it has for payment instructions.
- The ledger will emphasize trust and compliance while being interoperable by working with both public and private networks.
Swift announced this week that it is launching its own blockchain in partnership with blockchain software company Consensys.
Swift’s new blockchain-based shared ledger will facilitate instant, always-on cross-border transactions. Today’s announcement comes after Swift prototyped the blockchain with more than 30 financial institutions across the globe. The experience with those firms is helping Swift design and build the ledger, which is starting with a prototype powered by Consensys.
This move builds directly on Swift’s five-decade history as the backbone of cross-border financial messaging. Since it was founded in 1973, Swift has grown from a consortium of 239 banks in 15 countries into what it is today: a global standard for secure interbank communication that connects more than 11,000 institutions worldwide.
Just as Swift’s original network created a common language for banks to exchange payment instructions, its new ledger is designed to provide standardization and trust for tokenized assets. Swift anticipates that its new ledger will expand its focus on infrastructure. The member-owned cooperative plans to work with banks on leveraging the ledger infrastructure.
The launch also reflects rising demand for always-on settlement, interoperability between blockchains and fiat rails, and the need for a trusted global standard in digital finance. “We provide powerful and effective rails today and are moving at a rapid pace with our community to create the infrastructure stack of the future,” said Swift CEO Javier Pérez-Tasso. “Through this initial ledger concept we are paving the way for financial institutions to take the payments experience to the next level with Swift’s proven and trusted platform at the centre of the industry’s digital transformation.”
The new ledger will work with existing and emerging networks to record a secure, real-time log of transactions that take place among financial institutions. Swift will place a great emphasis on trust and compliance, leveraging its long-standing reputation. It will also ensure interoperability between distributed ledger transfers and existing fiat rails, by orchestrating between different systems and supporting both private and public networks.
“As digital assets continue to develop and mature at pace, Swift’s blockchain-based ledger provides the foundational infrastructure needed for trusted, real-time cross-border payments alongside existing ways of moving money,” said NatWest Head of Group Payment and Digital Asset Strategy Lee McNabb. “By partnering in this initiative, we are shaping solutions that allow our clients benefit from greater speed, transparency and crucially, flexibility in the digital age—without wavering on robust compliance and risk management.”
Swift’s ledger is not just an evolution of the company. It is also an example of how the wider industry is changing along with technology. In this case, the same rails that have carried payment messages for 50 years may soon carry records for tokenized funds, as well.