BNY’s move reflects a broader push by major financial institutions to bring blockchain technology into mainstream markets beyond crypto trading. Tokenization — the process of representing assets such as bonds, funds and equities on blockchain networks — is gaining traction as firms look for faster settlement, more efficient collateral management and lower operational costs.

The bank’s entry into the UAE also highlights how quickly the Gulf region is emerging as a center for digital asset finance. Abu Dhabi and Dubai have attracted crypto exchanges, stablecoin issuers and tokenization startups with regulatory frameworks designed to support digital assets while maintaining institutional oversight.

BNY’s involvement carries added weight because of the bank’s scale and role in traditional finance. The firm oversees about $59 trillion in assets under custody and administration, making it the world’s largest custodian bank, and was the first major U.S. global systemically important bank to launch digital asset custody services.

The UAE has also pushed deeper into state-backed digital finance initiatives. IHC and other local institutions recently unveiled plans last month for a regulated dirham-backed stablecoin aimed at government and institutional use.

Read more: BNY CEO says the future of crypto runs through big banks

More For You

charles hoskinson (CoinDesk)

The founder and CEO of Cardano’s Input Output said Google, Amazon and Facebook are terrified because AI agents will not behave like humans when confronted with ads.

What to know:

  • Charles Hoskinson told the Consensus 2026 conference that AI agents will dominate internet searches, commerce and activity by 2035, disrupting the core business models of Google, Amazon and Facebook.
  • He argued that AI agents, which do not click ads or have brand loyalty, will upend advertising-driven platforms and increasingly handle…

In this article

About the Author

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Stories