A pilot project often shows where major players believe the industry is heading. In this context, the recent move by the HSBC bank carries notable significance. The global banking giant has successfully completed a pilot project centered around its Tokenised Deposit Service (TDS) on the Canton [CC] network. What stands out here is that these tokenised deposits are not stablecoins. Instead, they represent traditional cash converted into a digital format. According to AMBCrypto, understanding this distinction is key to grasping why HSBC’s move matters. For starters, the pilot marks the first time the bank deployed its TDS on blockchain, setting a benchmark for other financial institutions. Interestingly, Yuval Rooz, co-founder of the Canton Network, took to X to share the update. This brings us to the bigger question: What does this development actually mean for the Canton Network? Interestingly, this is where the distinction starts to matter. As discussed earlier, HSBC’s pilot focuses on enabling tokenised deposits to function directly on blockchain rails. At a fundamental level, this allows financial institutions to move money more seamlessly while still operating within regulatory frameworks. But from a technical standpoint, the implications go further. The successful pilot strengthens Canton Network’s positioning as infrastructure built for DeFi, showing that the network can support real workflows rather than just crypto use cases. This naturally raises a key question: Is this milestone just the start of Canton’s institutional adoption? Canton network's institutional push meets slow market pricing From both a fundamental and technical angle, HSBC’s confidence in Canton could mark a turning point. Looking at its trajectory, Canton has built strong momentum this year. Institutional participation began after JPMorgan expanded its payment infrastructure onto the network. Building on that momentum, HSBC recently became one of the first Hong Kong-based banks to secure approval related to stablecoin initiatives. In this context, HSBC’s pilot on Canton looks less like a “standalone” experiment and more like part of a broader institutional shift toward blockchain-powered financial rails. Technically though, this momentum hasn’t fully reflected in price action yet. As the chart above shows, Canton network's last two quarterly cycles delivered relatively modest upside moves. However, when compared with broader market flows, the overall setup still leans bullish. Supporting this view, CC closed Q4 up 1.7%, diverging slightly from the wider market FUD seen during the same period. In that context, saying the momentum hasn’t reflected in price at all may be a stretch. Instead, with institutional capital gradually entering, the Canton Network appears to be building a consolidation base. Plus, with HSBC’s recent move, institutional inflows are expected to strengthen further, reinforcing this accumulation phase before a market repricing takes shape. Final Summary HSBC’s Tokenised Deposit Service pilot shows how regulated bank money can operate directly on blockchain infrastructure. Growing institutional participation suggests the Canton Network is evolving into infrastructure for institutional DeFi.
HSBC launches tokenised deposits on Canton – What it means for CC
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