ECB Unveils Tokenized Finance Plan to Strengthen EU Financial Autonomy

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The European Central Bank (ECB) has announced a tokenized finance plan to boost euro-based ecosystem growth. The project includes Pontes, a DLT layer launching in Q3 2026, and Appia, a 2028-focused initiative to build a tokenized financial market. The Eurosystem will release a blueprint for the system. The ECB aims to strengthen the euro’s global role and European financial autonomy. On-chain news suggests the plan could reshape cross-border payments and asset settlement.

The European Central Bank on Wednesday unveiled the timeline for the eurozone's initiative to shape the development of a tokenized wholesale financial ecosystem based around the single currency and ensure the euro's continued relevance as an international currency.

The strategy comprises Pontes, a distributed ledger technology (DLT) layer for transactions seen debuting in the third quarter, and Appia, which will "focus on working with the market to develop an entirely innovative and integrated financial market ecosystem embracing tokenisation and DLT," the bank said in a post on its website.

Appia is the heart of the strategy and is planned to run through 2028, when the Eurosystem — the monetary authority comprising the ECB and euro-using nations' central banks — plans to publish a blueprint outlining its vision for a tokenized financial ecosystem. It is designed to explore the long-term architecture of a tokenized financial system, including infrastructure, governance and standards.

“The initiative seeks to foster a more integrated, competitive and innovative European payments and securities environment, strengthening Europe’s strategic autonomy and resilience, and ensuring the euro’s continued relevance as an international currency,” the statement said.

European policymakers have increasingly framed financial infrastructure as a geopolitical issue, warning that reliance on non-European payment networks and dollar-centric financial systems exposes the bloc to external pressure. An analysis for the European Parliament last year found Europe’s dependence on foreign payment networks represented a “structural vulnerability” for its financial sovereignty and could become a source of geopolitical leverage.

The project is also part of the Eurosystem’s broader push to adapt financial infrastructure to the rise of distributed ledger technology, or blockchains, which allows financial assets such as bonds, funds and securities to be represented as digital tokens on shared networks.

“Appia is about building a road from today’s financial system to tomorrow’s tokenized markets, firmly grounded in central bank money,” ECB Executive Board member Piero Cipollone said in a statement.


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