For decades, wholesale dollar settlement required waiting for Fedwire to open, and JPMorgan simply stopped waiting.
The bank converted its permissioned system “JPM Coin” to JPMD, a deposit token backed by insured balances at JPMorgan, and placed it on Coinbase’s Ethereum layer-2 (L2).
Pilot transactions with B2C2, Coinbase and Mastercard are already live. The timing is not accidental, as JPMorgan is betting that corporate treasurers and trading desks will pay for 24-hour programmable liquidity before the Federal Reserve decides whether to extend Fedwire’s hours of operation.
This is not a DeFi experiment, but rather a regulated bank currency running on public rails with smart contract hooks.
JPMD represents actual deposits in a systemically important bank, subject to FDIC insurance and banking supervision. However, the ledger now resides on an Ethereum rollup, rather than JPMorgan’s internal database.
The bank presents this as a programmable commercial banking currency: instant, composable and available when the markets are not sleeping.
The demand for 24/7 and its limits
Between two JPMorgan clients using JPMD, settlement takes place 24/7. Transfers finalize on the basis within seconds, as the token moves and JPMorgan’s internal ledger is updated simultaneously.
Leaders propose “in seconds” and “always-on” settlement, and within the network they can implement it.
The current constraint is interoperability. A true interbank settlement always requires either a counterparty bank issuing a compatible token, or recourse to existing infrastructure.
If a counterparty banks elsewhere, JPMD ceases to be instant money and becomes a debt that must be converted via RTP or FedNow for retail flows, or via Fedwire when it reopens for wholesale reserve transfers.
This is full-time settlement within JPMorgan’s scope, not universal 24/7 settlement across US banks.
The Federal Reserve has proposed expanding Fedwire to 22/7/365 operation, but that remains a proposal. Meanwhile, JPMD offers the experience today, within a single institution.
What Base Gains, What Ethereum Absorbs
These are authorized balances subject to public accumulation.
Base provides cheap block space and native smart contract functionality, while JPMorgan controls who can hold or interact with JPMD through allowlists and contract-level access logic.
The immediate on-chain footprint will be modest compared to DeFi retail volumes, but the symbolic weight is considerable: regulated bank money now takes place on an Ethereum L2.
This means that ETH-secured infrastructure carries bank-grade feeds and compliance-controlled applications can connect to the same execution environment as permissionless protocols.
Coinbase has positioned Base for the moment, as “onchain institutions” was the pitch from launch.
Today, a large bank validates this thesis by choosing Base rather than private or consortium chains. For Ethereum, this introduces a new class of economic activity into the demand for L2 security, even if these flows never interact with open DeFi markets.
For Base, this is proof of product-market fit in the institutional segment and an advantage against competing L2s that lack comparable regulatory relationships or custody integration.
Deposit tokens and stablecoins
Deposit tokens are claims on a specific bank, not on the reserve wallet of a non-bank issuer. This structural difference is important because JPMD can bear interest within the banking perimeter and address treasurers facing internal or regulatory restrictions on holding stablecoins.
However, deposit tokens are not yet universally cash-like across all institutions, as their value proposition weakens as soon as a counterparty is not with the same issuer.
Expect coexistence rather than displacement. USDC remains the open, composable dollar for permissionless locations and cross-border flows where banking relationships do not exist or are not scalable.
JPMD is a closed rail for large KYC transactions and exchange collateral management, which Coinbase can natively integrate.
Skeptics are already saying that deposit tokens will not be a major breakthrough in payments until multi-bank interoperability is in place. In the meantime, these are walled gardens with smart contract functionality.
The move allows JPMorgan to bypass “banking hours” constraints without waiting for the Federal Reserve to extend Fedwire or for the entire industry to adopt RTP and FedNow on a large scale.
Off-hours cash transfers between JPMorgan clients become trivial, as corporate treasurers can move millions at 2 a.m. on a Sunday if they need to. This creates competitive pressure on banks who are still tied to batch settlement windows and business day cutoff times.
Change also creates strategic tensions. The Fed’s proposed Fedwire expansion would enable permanent wholesale settlement across the banking system, but JPMorgan is offering a version of that future within its own walls today.
If other big banks follow with their own deposit tokens, the industry could fragment into competing networks unless standards converge.
If they don’t follow, JPMorgan enjoys a liquidity and service advantage that is self-reinforcing as customers consolidate their business with the bank, which can move money at any time.
Multibank networks are the keystone
The end game depends on interoperability. If other systemically important banks issue compatible tokens, or if initiatives such as the Regulated Liability Network in the US and UK tokenized deposit pilots converge on common standards, then “24/7 money banking” will cease to be a unique banking capability and start to resemble a new programmable clearing layer.
This is when deposit tokens become infrastructure, not just a product.
In the short term, how JPMD is used on Coinbase sites and custody workflows will be closely observed. Settlement, collateral management and corporate treasury operations are the obvious first applications.
If volumes increase and other banks join, the competitive dynamic changes: the base becomes a shared settlement venue for institutional dollar flows, and Ethereum L2s become the default execution layer for programmable bank money.
If they don’t join, JPMorgan has built a faster pipeline for its own clients, serving as a reminder that the Fed no longer controls the timing of wholesale settlements.



