UBS, Chainlink Execute First Onchain Tokenized Fund Redemption in $100T Market

UBS, Chainlink Execute First Onchain Tokenized Fund Redemption in $100T Market

Finance

Share this article

The transaction involved the tokenized UBS USD Money Market Investment Fund Token (uMINT) on Ethereum, with DigiFT as the onchain distributor.

By Francisco Rodrigues|Edited by Sheldon Reback

Nov 4, 2025, 11:00 a.m.

UBS logo above road (Claudio Schwarz/Unsplash/Modified by CoinDesk)
  • UBS completed the first onchain redemption of a tokenized fund using Chainlink’s Digital Transfer Agent (DTA), marking a milestone in blockchain infrastructure for the $100 trillion fund industry.
  • The transaction involved the tokenized UBS USD Money Market Investment Fund Token (uMINT) on Ethereum with DigiFT as the on-chain distributor.
  • The achievement aims to drive operational efficiencies and new possibilities for product composability in the fund industry, with UBS’s Tokenize platform working to automate key functions.

UBS said it completed the first on-chain redemption of a tokenized fund using Chainlink’s Digital Transfer Agent (DTA) in a live transaction that underscores how blockchain infrastructure is starting to interface with the $100 trillion global fund industry.

The transaction involved the tokenized money market fund UBS USD Money Market Investment Fund Token (uMINT) built on Ethereum.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW

Don’t miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today.See all newslettersBy signing up, you will receive emails about CoinDesk products and you agree to ourterms of useandprivacy policy.

DigiFT served as the onchain distributor, settling the redemption using Chainlink’s DTA standard. UBS’ internal systems initiated the process, which Chainlink’s infrastructure then executed, according to a press release shared with CoinDesk.

“This transaction represents a key milestone in how smart contract-based technologies and technical standards enhance fund operations and the investor experience,” Mike Dargan, UBS’ group chief operating and technology officer, said.

“As the industry continues to embrace tokenized finance, this achievement illustrates how these innovations drive greater operational efficiencies and new possibilities for product composability.”

The transaction is part of a broader initiative from UBS Tokenize, the bank’s in-house platform for blockchain-based financial products.

By automating key functions like order-taking, execution and settlement across digital and traditional systems, the technology aims to cut operational complexity and processing time for the $100 trillion global fund industry.

It follows a recent pilot where Chainlink connected existing bank systems to blockchains via Swift, the financial messaging network.

That setup used Chainlink’s Cross-Chain Interoperability Protocol and Runtime Environment to process fund transactions using ISO 20022 messages, letting banks access blockchain rails without overhauling legacy infrastructure.

More For You

By CoinDesk Research

Oct 16, 2025

OwlTing Report Open Graph Image

Stablecoin payment volumes have grown to $19.4B year-to-date in 2025. OwlTing aims to capture this market by developing payment infrastructure that processes transactions in seconds for fractions of a cent.

More For You

By Krisztian Sandor|Edited by Stephen Alpher

14 hours ago

Brad Garlinghouse, the CEO of Ripple Labs (Jesse Hamilton/CoinDesk)

With the acquisition, Ripple aims to provide quickly-deployable wallets to boost fintech and corporate crypto payments, president Monica Long said in an interview.

What to know:

  • Ripple is buying crypto wallet and custody firm Palisade to boost real-time custody and payments for fintechs and corporates.
  • The acquisition adds fast, scalable wallet tech to Ripple’s institutional custody offering.
  • This is Ripple’s fourth acquisition this year after buying prime broker Hidden Road, stablecoin infrastructure firm Rail and corporate treasury management platform GTreasury.


 

Leave a Reply

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