TL;DR
JPMorgan filed for its second tokenized money market fund on Ethereum, accelerating Wall Street’s race to build regulated financial products on blockchain infrastructure now that the Genius Act has removed the regulatory ambiguity that kept institutions on the sidelines.
JPMorgan Chase filed paperwork on Tuesday for its second tokenized money market fund, four months after becoming the largest global systemically important bank to put a fund on the Ethereum blockchain. The JPMorgan OnChain Liquidity-Token Money Market Fund, ticker JLTXX, will issue digital tokens on Ethereum representing shares in a portfolio of US Treasuries and overnight repurchase agreements. The tokens can be held in digital wallets, transferred between investors, or posted as collateral in crypto markets, with transactions settling in minutes rather than the one to two days that conventional fund shares require.
The filing is unremarkable by the standards of traditional asset management. It is a money market fund. It buys Treasuries. It pays a yield. What makes it significant is where it lives. The fund exists on a public blockchain, governed by smart contracts, accessible to investors who hold digital wallets, and designed to comply with the Genius Act, the federal stablecoin framework that President Trump signed into law in July 2025. The largest bank in the United States is building regulated financial products on the same infrastructure that the crypto industry spent a decade telling Wall Street would replace it.
The first fund
JPMorgan’s asset management arm launched My OnChain Net Yield Fund, known as MONY, on the Ethereum blockchain in December 2025. The fund invests in US Treasuries and repurchase agreements fully collateralised by Treasuries, with a one million dollar minimum investment for qualified investors. JPMorgan seeded it with 100 million dollars. MONY is powered by Kinexys Digital Assets, the bank’s proprietary tokenization platform that has processed more than 300 billion dollars in intraday repurchase transactions since its inception.
The second fund, JLTXX, extends the strategy. Where MONY was a private placement under SEC Rule 506(c), restricted to qualified investors, JLTXX appears to be structured for broader distribution through a 485BPOS filing, the amendment form used for existing registered investment companies. The underlying assets are the same: Treasuries and overnight repos collateralised by Treasuries. The innovation is not in what the fund holds. It is in how the fund’s shares move.
A conventional money market fund share settles through a transfer agent, a custodian, and a clearing house, a process that takes a business day or two and involves multiple intermediaries. A tokenized share settles on-chain in minutes. The investor holds the token directly in a wallet. The token can be transferred peer-to-peer. It can be posted as collateral in decentralised finance protocols or used in crypto-native trading venues without converting to cash first. The underlying Treasuries remain with a traditional custodian. The ownership layer moves to the blockchain. The plumbing changes. The asset does not.
The race
JPMorgan is not alone. BlackRock filed paperwork last week for two tokenized money market funds targeting investors holding cash in stablecoins. The first, the BlackRock Daily Reinvestment Stablecoin Reserve Vehicle, would invest in cash, short-dated Treasuries, and overnight repos. The second would tokenize a share class of an existing 6.1 billion dollar money market fund on Ethereum. BlackRock’s BUIDL fund, its first tokenized product, launched in March 2024 and now manages more than 2.5 billion dollars across eight chains including Ethereum, Solana, and Aptos.
The market value of tokenized assets has surged more than 400 per cent since the start of 2025 to roughly 32 billion dollars, according to rwa.xyz. The figure is small relative to the trillions held in mutual funds and ETFs. But the growth rate is not small, and the participants are not startups. JPMorgan, BlackRock, Franklin Templeton, and Goldman Sachs are all launching or testing tokenized fund products. The institutions that spent years dismissing blockchain as a solution in search of a problem are now racing to build products on it.
Haun Ventures raised one billion dollars in May for two funds targeting stablecoin infrastructure and AI agent plumbing, a bet that the financial rails crypto built will become the financial rails AI agents use. Katie Haun’s thesis is that AI agents will need regulated financial infrastructure to transact autonomously, and that the firms which built stablecoin plumbing are best positioned to build it. JPMorgan’s tokenized funds are the institutional version of the same thesis: traditional assets, distributed on crypto infrastructure, designed for a world in which capital moves at the speed of software.
The law
The Genius Act, signed in July 2025, created the first federal regulatory framework for dollar-linked stablecoins. It requires stablecoin issuers to be licensed, hold one-to-one reserves in dollars or low-risk assets such as Treasury bills, and comply with anti-money-laundering and sanctions requirements. The law also preserves the ability of banks to issue tokenized deposits that pay interest, and explicitly states that permitted stablecoins are not securities.
The regulatory clarity is the reason the race accelerated. Before the Genius Act, tokenized fund products occupied a grey area. Issuers faced uncertain enforcement from the SEC, unclear classification of digital tokens, and the risk that a future administration would reverse any guidance. The law removed the ambiguity. Stablecoin reserves must be held in Treasuries, repos, or cash. Tokenized fund shares that invest in the same instruments sit naturally alongside the stablecoin framework. JPMorgan and BlackRock are not building on the blockchain because they believe in decentralisation. They are building on it because Congress told them the rules.
Regulation has historically been the catalyst that unlocks institutional adoption in technology markets. Europe’s regulatory frameworks have driven investment into sectors from cleantech to cybersecurity by reducing the uncertainty that keeps large institutions on the sidelines. The Genius Act is doing the same for tokenized finance in the United States. The law did not invent tokenization. It made tokenization investable.
The strategy
Jamie Dimon told shareholders in his April 2026 annual letter that JPMorgan must move faster on blockchain because “a whole new set of competitors is emerging based on blockchain, which includes stablecoins, smart contracts and other forms of tokenization.” He added: “We need to roll out our own blockchain technology and continually focus on what our customers want.” The man who once called Bitcoin a fraud is now warning his shareholders that blockchain competitors pose a strategic threat to the bank.
Dimon’s concern is not philosophical. Stablecoin transaction volumes surpassed the combined on-chain settlement volumes of Visa and Mastercard in 2025. Stripe acquired the stablecoin infrastructure company Bridge for 1.1 billion dollars. Mastercard acquired BVNK for 1.8 billion dollars. The payments infrastructure that the crypto industry built during the speculative phases of the market is now being absorbed by the financial institutions that initially rejected it.
Fintechs building stablecoin payments products are already reaching billion-dollar valuations, serving verticals from e-commerce to healthcare suppliers with treasury tools that operate natively on blockchain rails. JPMorgan’s tokenized funds are the bank’s answer: offering the same speed and programmability, but with the balance sheet, regulatory licence, and brand of the largest bank in America behind them.
The gap
Tokenized assets at 32 billion dollars represent a rounding error in a global fund industry measured in the tens of trillions. The gap between the current market and the projections is enormous. Boston Consulting Group and Ripple project the tokenized asset market could reach 18.9 trillion dollars by 2033. That projection requires tokenization to move from a novelty to a default, from a handful of money market funds to bonds, equities, private credit, real estate, and every other asset class that currently settles through legacy infrastructure.
The obstacle is not technology. Ethereum works. Smart contracts work. Digital wallets work. Startups are already building AI-native financial infrastructure from payroll to treasury management on these rails, and the tools are maturing faster than the institutions adopting them. The obstacle is distribution. Institutional investors hold assets through custodians, prime brokers, and fund administrators whose systems are not designed for blockchain settlement. Every intermediary in the chain must upgrade or be replaced. JPMorgan’s strategy is to be the intermediary that upgrades rather than the one that gets replaced. Kinexys is the bank’s attempt to build blockchain infrastructure inside the existing financial system, rather than outside it.
Central banks are assembling their own teams to identify where new technologies can accelerate financial operations, and tokenization sits alongside AI as a capability that could transform how monetary institutions function. The European Central Bank’s exploration of generative AI in financial infrastructure is part of the same institutional pattern: legacy institutions moving toward technologies they once dismissed, at a pace that reflects necessity rather than enthusiasm.
JPMorgan’s second tokenized fund is not a product launch. It is a position statement. The bank that built the modern plumbing of global finance is rebuilding that plumbing on the blockchain, one money market fund at a time, because it has concluded that the infrastructure the crypto industry built is better than the infrastructure it is replacing. The tokens settle faster. The records are more transparent. The custody is more programmable. The only thing the blockchain lacked was institutional credibility. JPMorgan just filed the paperwork to provide it.