Key Takeaway:
- UK starts Digital Gilt Instrument pilot using HSBC Orion’s distributed ledger platform.
- Pilot tests end-to-end sovereign bond issuance, settlement speed, and lifecycle events.
- Goal: streamline processes, improve transparency, maintain controls, integrate with existing gilt infrastructure.
According to HM Treasury, the UK has launched a Digital Gilt Instrument (DIGIT) pilot and selected HSBC Orion as the platform to record a government bond using distributed ledger technology (DLT). The pilot is designed to test end-to-end issuance and lifecycle events for a sovereign bond in digital form.
A digital gilt records the bond and its transfers on a shared ledger while preserving the economic rights and obligations of a conventional gilt. The structure is a market infrastructure experiment, not a retail crypto product.
The objectives include assessing whether DLT can streamline issuance, accelerate settlement, and improve transparency without compromising controls. The pilot will also explore how digital processes interoperate with existing gilt market rails and post-trade workflows.
As reported by the Financial Times, industry groups expect features such as near-instant settlement to appeal to investors but note that legislation and tax clarity would be needed before digital gilts become mainstream.
As reported by CryptoRank, Britain appointed HSBC and law firm Ashurst to lead the pilot, with HSBC’s Orion providing the digital assets issuance platform and Ashurst advising on legal and structuring matters. The mandate frames a technology-and-legal test bed rather than a change to the broader gilt framework at this stage.
The public-sector team will set the scope and determine how issuance, settlement, custody, and corporate actions are represented on-ledger. Orion will facilitate tokenization, distribution, and lifecycle workflows, potentially linking to existing market infrastructures where required.
Operational questions under evaluation include how beneficial ownership is represented on-ledger, how access credentials are managed, and how primary dealers and custodians interface with the ledger. The outcomes should indicate whether DLT can deliver efficiency and transparency while aligning with current market conventions for sovereign debt.
“HSBC is delighted to be supporting the continued development of the gilt market,” said Patrick George, Global Head of Markets & Securities Services at HSBC, adding that blockchain could significantly accelerate settlement times and improve UK debt-market structure.
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