JPMorgan’s new blockchain chief once warned that tokenization does not equal liquidity
JPMorgan’s new crypto head Oliver Harris warns that tokenizing assets isn’t a magic fix for liquidity, but believes the technology is finally ready to “rip out” and replace the financial industry’s legacy back end.
What to know:
- Oliver Harris, JPMorgan’s new head of its Kinexys blockchain division, once argued that tokenizing assets alone will not solve finance’s liquidity problems.
- Harris said the real transformation will come from building a global on-chain settlement layer that unifies money, assets and data on a single software platform.
- He said he believes technology and regulation are now mature enough for large banks’ growing investments in blockchain infrastructure to begin reshaping how markets operate.
“Tokenization does not equal liquidity,” Harris, who will be leading JPM’s Kinexys division, said during a panel at Consensus Toronto last year as the founder and CEO of Arda, a startup that Harris worked on for a year and a half.
The comment underscores a more cautious view of one of the industry’s biggest narratives as Harris takes over Kinexys.
In a LinkedIn post on Tuesday, Harris said his focus will be on expanding digital settlement infrastructure, advancing tokenization capabilities and strengthening partnerships across both public and private blockchain networks.
“The work sits at the foundation of the next era of market structure: how money, assets, and information moves onchain,” he wrote.
During his panel last year, Harris also reflected on his own path through the industry, noting repeated attempts to bring tokenization into mainstream finance. “I think I would call this my third hell loop,” he said, referencing roles at JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs and his startup Arda. He added that this time may be different given recent progress in technology and regulation.
