JPMorgan has expanded its blockchain initiatives with the launch of an on-chain intraday repurchase agreement (repo) solution designed to transform the way institutional traders exchange cash and securities in real time. The project was developed in partnership with fintech firms HQLA-X and Ownera, integrating blockchain-based infrastructure to enhance transaction efficiency and settlement precision.
The new platform enables repo traders to swap cash held at JPMorgan for securities listed on the HQLA-X platform using blockchain-powered deposit accounts. It operates on Kinexys, JPMorgan’s proprietary blockchain network, which was previously known as Onyx and now serves as the bank’s dedicated blockchain business unit.
According to the companies involved, the tool manages the complete repo transaction lifecycle — from trade execution to collateral management and final settlement — with minute-level accuracy. This capability allows traders to set specific settlement and maturity times, representing a significant upgrade over traditional systems that often lack such precision.
The solution facilitates peer-to-peer connectivity via Ownera’s global router network and employs the open FinP2P protocol to link otherwise separate financial systems. This interoperability is expected to improve liquidity access and operational efficiency across participating institutions.
In its early rollout, the system has demonstrated the ability to handle up to $1 billion in daily transaction volume, reflecting what the partners describe as growing institutional interest in blockchain-based market infrastructure. The platform has been built with scalability in mind, with the intention to function on an industry-wide level and support a variety of trading venues, collateral types, and digital money instruments. These include stablecoins, deposit tokens, and central bank digital currencies (CBDCs).
The initiative underscores JPMorgan’s position as one of the leading U.S. banks investing in blockchain innovation. Kinexys now encompasses four operational divisions: Digital Payments, Digital Assets, Liink (a payment information network), and Labs (focused on blockchain research and development). Each division supports the bank’s broader goal of integrating blockchain technology into mainstream financial services.
Earlier in the year, JPMorgan began piloting its JPMD deposit-token project to enable institutional payments on Base, the Ethereum layer-2 network developed by Coinbase. The bank has also worked with Coinbase on initiatives to connect Chase bank accounts to cryptocurrency services, with additional plans to allow Chase rewards to be redeemed in USDC on the Base network.
By combining JPMorgan’s blockchain infrastructure with HQLA-X’s securities platform and Ownera’s connectivity solutions, the new intraday repo tool aims to deliver faster, more flexible, and more secure market operations. If widely adopted, it could serve as a blueprint for how blockchain technology can streamline complex institutional trading processes while enhancing transparency, reducing settlement risk, and enabling new forms of digital asset integration in traditional finance.
