Key participants include Swiss-regulated AMINA Bank (digital asset bank), Incore Bank, Deutsche Börse-owned Crypto Finance Group (platform provider), and Google Cloud (GCUL technology).[1][3][5] Notable individuals are AMINA CEO Franz Bergmueller, who highlighted scaling potential, and Crypto Finance CTO Nathaniel Zollinger, emphasizing netting goals; Google Cloud's Matt Renner praised regulatory compliance.[1][3] No new legislation or agencies are specified; the pilot adheres to existing Swiss frameworks without tokenized deposits or new digital currencies.[3][5]
This builds on a November 2025 pilot by AMINA and Crypto Finance for near-real-time fiat settlements, addressing cross-border delays and costs via DLT without disrupting regulations.[3][5][7] The 2026 trials advanced to live client transactions between AMINA and Incore clients on Crypto Finance, demonstrating production scalability.[1] Next phases target more institutions for greater netting, cross-border, multi-currency, and POS uses.[1][3]
Newsworthy for proving DLT's practical integration into traditional banking for 24/7, efficient crypto settlements amid 2026's accelerating digital asset regulations and tokenization trends.[1][3][8] It showcases efficiency gains (instant client trades, netting) for volatile crypto volumes without new currencies, positioning Switzerland as a hub for compliant innovation scalable globally.[1][3][9]