The largest U.S. banks are reportedly planning a joint tokenized deposit network set to launch in 2027, positioning regulated bank money directly against stablecoins.Key TakeawaysThe Wall Street Journal reports JPMorgan, Citi, BofA and Wells Fargo plan a tokenized deposit network via The Clearing House by 2027.JPMorgan’s JPM Coin already runs on Coinbase’s Base for institutional clients, giving it a head start over the broader consortium.The Cari Network, backed by five regional banks, targets a separate retail-facing tokenized deposit launch in Q4 2026. Banks Pool Resources Through The Clearing House According to a Wall Street Journal (WSJ) report, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, and other major commercial banks are backing the effort through The Clearing House, a real-time payment network operator co-owned by those same institutions. The network will link traditional payment rails with blockchain infrastructure, allowing deposits to move on-chain with 24/7 settlement and programmable functionality. The move comes as stablecoin issuers and crypto firms press further into the payments arena amid a more permissive regulatory climate under President Trump’s administration, the exclusive report by WSJ reporters Gina Heeb and Vicky Ge Huang notes. How Tokenized Deposits Differ From Stablecoins Tokenized deposits are actual commercial bank deposits recorded and transferred on distributed ledger technology. Key distinctions from stablecoins include: Backed 1:1 by fiat reserves held directly at the issuing bank Potential eligibility for FDIC deposit insurance up to statutory limits Full AML and KYC compliance baked in Programmable settlement running 24 hours a day, seven days a week Stablecoins such as USDC and USDT, and many others, are issued by non-bank entities, backed by cash and Treasuries held in custody, and sit outside the regulated deposit perimeter. Tokenized deposits keep dollars inside the banking system while adding onchain functionality. JPMorgan Already Has a Head Start JPMorgan is not waiting for the broader consortium. The bank’s JPM Coin, also referred to as JPMD, launched on Coinbase’s Base network in late 2025 for institutional clients and has since expanded toward the Canton Network in 2026. JPMorgan positions the product as a direct bank deposit claim with on-chain programmability, calling it a superior option to stablecoins. Citigroup has also moved forward with Citi Token Services, integrating tokenized liquidity with 24/7 USD clearing for cross-border instant payments. A Parallel Network Targets Retail A separate consortium called the Cari Network, involving regional banks including Huntington, First Horizon, KeyCorp, M&T, and Old National, is targeting a customer-facing tokenized deposit network launch in Q4 2026 following a Q3 pilot. That effort addresses the retail side of the market while the major-bank initiative focuses on wholesale and institutional use cases. What It Means for Crypto The industry largely anticipates tokenized deposits and stablecoins will coexist rather than one displacing the other, though some market participants regard the development as a direct competitive test. Tokenized deposits offer regulatory benefits for institutional and wholesale applications, while stablecoins continue to hold an advantage across decentralized finance ( defi), retail payments, and cross-chain composability. For the broader crypto market, banks shifting substantial transaction volumes onto blockchain rails is expected to increase demand for settlement infrastructure, oracle networks, and interoperability solutions. With each passing day, growing institutional confidence in distributed ledger technology further solidifies its place within traditional finance (TradFi).