JPMorgan debuts first money market fund tokenised on Ethereum

MONY, open to qualified investors, allows them to earn a yield while holding the token on the blockchain

    • Tokenisation has been touted as a way to make financial markets faster, cheaper and more transparent.
    • Tokenisation has been touted as a way to make financial markets faster, cheaper and more transparent. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Tue, Dec 16, 2025 · 10:03 AM

    [NEW YORK] JPMorgan Chase’s asset management arm is launching its first ever tokenised money market fund built on Ethereum, joining a growing list of Wall Street firms pushing into blockchain-based finance.

    The New York-based bank on Monday (Dec 15) debuted the My OnChain Net Yield Fund, or MONY, a private fund supported by JPMorgan’s tokenisation platform, Kinexys Digital Assets, according to a press release. MONY, open to qualified investors, allows them to earn a yield while holding the token on the blockchain.

    The move comes as the biggest firm on Wall Street push deeper into tokenisation, which involves turning conventional assets – stocks, bonds or private loans – into blockchain-based tokens that confer fractional ownership. Many financial firms have experimented with blockchain investing for years.

    Recently, activity has since picked up following the passage of the Genius Act in the US, which sets out rules for stablecoins, another fast-growing category of digital money.

    Tokenisation has been touted as a way to make financial markets faster, cheaper and more transparent. In theory, tokenised funds could offer near-instant settlement and disintermediate legacy infrastructure. But that vision remains largely theoretical.

    The tokenised vehicle has a minimum investment of US$1 million investment minimum, according to The Wall Street Journal (WSJ), which was first to report the news. JPMorgan plans to seed the fund with US$100 million of its own capital, per WSJ, then open it to outside investors.

    “Tokenisation can fundamentally change the speed and efficiency of transactions, adding new capabilities to traditional products,” wrote John Donohue, head of global liquidity at JP Morgan Asset Management.

    The launch comes as the bank itself in August, wrote that the market for tokenised real-world assets, long touted as crypto’s bridge to mainstream finance, remains small, largely driven by crypto-native firms rather than Wall Street incumbents. For all the hype, strategists led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou wrote that the total tokenised asset base remains “rather insignificant,”

    Still, firms are experimenting. HSBC Holdings just last month announced plans to start offering tokenised deposits to its corporate clients. Bank of New York Mellon and Goldman Sachs in July announced a collaboration to use blockchain technology to maintain an ownership record of money market funds.

    Fidelity Investments filed for an “on-chain” share class of its Treasury money market fund this year and other major banks, including Deutsche Bank, Citigroup, and Banco Santander, are also exploring how digital assets can make payments quicker and more efficient. BlackRock’s digital liquidity fund, BUIDL, continues to dominate, with assets peaking at US$2.9 billion. BLOOMBERG

    Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.

    Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services