Doha Bank has completed a $150 million digital bond that settled instantly on Euroclear’s distributed ledger infrastructure, underscoring how regulated DLT systems, not public blockchains, are becoming the preferred rails for institutional tokenized debt.
The Qatari lender listed its digitally native notes on the London Stock Exchange’s International Securities Market, achieving same-day settlement through Euroclear’s Digital Financial Market Infrastructure, a permissioned DLT platform operated by a central securities depository.
Standard Chartered served as the sole global coordinator and sole arranger on the deal, leading the structuring, execution, and distribution of Doha Bank’s $150 million digital bond.
A growing number of banks and regulators across the Middle East and Asia are adopting permissioned distributed ledger technology (DLT) platforms for digital bond issuance to ensure regulatory control. Meanwhile, selective use cases, such as DBS’s tokenized structured notes on Ethereum, show that public blockchains are also being deployed where investor access, programmability, and market design make openness viable.
“Doha Bank’s debut digital bond issuance underscores the tangible, real-world efficiencies that cutting-edge digital infrastructure is delivering for capital markets, and the increasing appetite among our clients for this next-gen capability and execution,” said Salman Ansari, the bank’s global head of capital markets, in a release.
Designed for regulated markets
Unlike public blockchains, which are open networks, Euroclear’s DLT is designed for regulated capital markets, offering controlled access, legal finality, and integration with existing custody and settlement systems.
That structure allows issuers to capture the efficiency gains of tokenization, such as T+0 settlement and automated record keeping, while remaining compatible with international market standards and institutional investor requirements.
“This transaction demonstrates that same-day execution and settlement are achievable through a neutral, regulated DLT infrastructure that aligns with established market standards – reducing friction and time while maintaining the level of assurance expected by issuers and investors,” Sebastien Danloy, chief business officer at Euroclear, said.
The transaction sits within a broader regional push to modernize capital markets infrastructure rather than to create parallel crypto-native systems.
Orion, developed by HSBC, has been used for sovereign and corporate digital bonds in Hong Kong, mainland China, and the Middle East, and is designed to integrate directly with existing post-trade infrastructure such as Euroclear, Clearstream, and Hong Kong’s Central Moneymarkets Unit.
That interoperability allows issuers to achieve faster settlement and on-chain record keeping while keeping custody, listing, and investor access anchored in familiar market structures.
Onyx, now branded under JPMorgan’s Kinexys platform, serves a similar role for bank-issued debt and commercial paper, enabling end-to-end issuance and near-instant settlement using tokenized cash.
Standard Chartered said the deal reflected rising client demand for digital issuance.
Together, the deal adds to a growing body of digital bond issuance across the Middle East and Asia, where banks and regulators are steadily moving tokenization from pilot projects into live markets by embedding DLT into existing capital markets infrastructure rather than reinventing it.