Prepared forRedStone Finance
Evidence pageRedStone Finance
WindowLast 90 days
SourceReddit posts + comments
Counted evidence

The mentions behind the reach table.

Use the filters below to separate posts from comments, organic community discussion from owned/profile placements, and individual subreddits.

Total mentions
7
Posts 7 - comments 0
Organic
7
Third-party subreddit mentions counted toward discoverable community demand.
Owned / profile
0
Brand-controlled subreddit or profile placements separated from organic discussion.
Top placement
r/RWATimes
2 mentions in the strongest visible placement.
Kind All Posts Comments
Source All Organic Owned
Subreddit
Showing 7 of 7
post r/RWATimes u/rwatimes 2026-06-24
![](https://static.cryptobriefing.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/23142335/what-is-redstone-oracles-a-look-at-next-gen-blockchain-data--800x420.jpeg) RedStone, one of the more prolific modular oracle providers in DeFi, has integrated its verified price data directly into Newton’s policy enforcement layer. The partnership went live on June 23, coinc ... **Details:** - **Published:** 23/06/2026 18:23 (UTC) - **📊 Characteristics Score:** > **Asset Type:** *others* > **Sentiment:** `0.3` > **Entropy:** `0.75` > **Relevance:** `0.8` > **Staleness:** `0.2` > **Uncertainty:** `0.4` > **Level-1 Focus:** *undefined* - **🏷️ Tags:** N/A **Source:** https://rwatimes.io/articles/cryptobriefing-red-stone-partners-with-newton-to-launch-verified-price-data-in-mainnet-beta-1877747766?utm_source=reddit&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=reddit --- *Posted from RWA Times Bot*
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post r/Stellar u/raphlf 2026-06-05
https://preview.redd.it/7p7vd8hzah5h1.jpg?width=1254&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=46dd084974a7721f2538dc0ec82303669ee754ec MoneyGram launched MGUSD, a native U.S. dollar stablecoin on Stellar, on June 2, putting Stellar at the center of payment flows for 60 million active customers at 500,000+ retail locations. The SDF published the Protocol 27 "Zipper" upgrade guide, setting a July 8 mainnet vote with SDK releases starting June 5. The Stellar Development Foundation also joined the United Nations Development Programme's new 26-member Blockchain Advisory Group focused on financial inclusion. # MoneyGram Goes Native with MGUSD MGUSD is issued by Bridge (a Stripe company) and minted through M0 infrastructure, embedded as a self-custodial wallet inside MoneyGram's consumer app. Customers can store dollars on-chain, send across borders, and withdraw cash at the MoneyGram agent network without managing seed phrases. The launch transitions MoneyGram off Circle's USDC for its core settlement layer, deepening a five-year partnership with SDF. [The Block](https://www.theblock.co/post/403320/moneygram-debuts-mgusd-stablecoin-on-stellar-for-its-global-payments-network), [CoinDesk](https://www.coindesk.com/business/2026/06/02/moneygram-launches-stablecoin-on-stellar-joining-rush-toward-digital-dollar-payments), and [PR Newswire](https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/moneygram-launches-mgusd-a-stablecoin-to-power-its-own-global-network-302787799.html) all covered the announcement. MoneyGram CEO Anthony Suhu discussed the stablecoin strategy on the [Deep Dive Podcast](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mHGXEQ-vfqc), and Denelle Dixon covered both the MGUSD launch and DTCC integration in an [interview with Paul Barron Network](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XoL_zIg9neU). # Institutional RWA Infrastructure Stellar's tokenized real-world asset stack crossed $2.8 billion, a 3.5x increase since late 2025, with 1,700 monthly active developers placing it fourth among all blockchain ecosystems, per [Messari's State of Stellar Q1 2026 report](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t0agtgLajhg). [RedStone published SEP-40](https://blog.redstone.finance/2026/06/04/reliability-at-scale-redstone-and-the-data-standard-for-stellars-rwa-moment/), Stellar's standard interface for oracle consumers, with nine assets now live: stablecoins, sovereign debt, and Bitcoin products. Lending markets and derivatives platforms can now consume unified pricing data without per-protocol custom integration work. Separately, [tZERO's SEC-registered custodian added USDM1](https://www.tzero.com/news/tzero-adds-sovereign-digital-bond-collateral-to-regulated-broker-dealer-custody), a Marshall Islands sovereign bond backed 1:1 by U.S. Treasuries, enabling institutional on-chain collateral within a regulated framework with 24/7 settlement. WisdomTree's WTGXX tokenized money market fund, available on Stellar at a $1 minimum with 24/7 subscriptions, reached $700 million AUM with 6x year-over-year growth, according to WisdomTree's Jeremy Schwartz and Meredith Hennon on the [Pantera Capital podcast](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j9TKmdbS-XA). # Protocol 27 and Developer Security The [Protocol 27 "Zipper" upgrade guide](https://stellar.org/blog/foundation-news/stellar-zipper-protocol-27-upgrade-guide) introduces authentication delegation for smart accounts under CAP-0071, which streamlines multisig and reduces transaction costs. SDK releases run June 5-11, testnet upgrade June 18, mainnet vote July 8. Developers must review breaking changes before the vote. [Inferara completed its third SCF milestone](https://medium.com/@inferara/leave-no-room-for-errors-how-inference-is-bringing-accessible-theorem-proving-to-stellar-89152f678985), delivering the Inference formal verification language for Soroban. The toolchain enables developers to mathematically prove smart contract correctness with imperative syntax. [Nectar Network received a $75K Build award from SCF #42](https://x.com/i/article/2062894403669446656) for a liquidation protocol that replaces single-operator bots with pooled capital and competing staked operators. It is live on testnet. # Agentic Commerce Stellar's x402 payment protocol and Brale [demonstrated a live integration](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i1JUfrHg3_A) at Day Zero: services sold to AI agents in 30 lines of code, with an agent autonomously making a purchase on Stellar, paired with a quickstart guide in the Stellar docs. Defindex's [Interoperable series, Chapter 7](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ql7ZpkWQ0Aw), with Crossmint and OpenSettling, covered embedded finance, smart wallets, and agent-to-agent transactions, framing stablecoins as the operating layer for machine-to-machine commerce. A [guest article on LumenLoop](https://lumenloop.com/research/stellar-needs-native-perpetual-futures) by @notishansingh argues for native perpetual futures on Stellar, with Zenith Protocols building toward that use case. # SCF, Community, and Governance [SCF #43 closed](https://medium.com/stellar-community/scf-43-round-recap-62942f07757e) with 29 projects funded across 85 submissions, distributing $3.14M XLM through three tracks: Open, Integration, and RFP. The referral program sourced 22 of the 29 winners. Stellar West Africa [confirmed 10 West African projects](https://twitter.com/Stellar_WA/status/2062224708234293516) received funding in SCF #43, totaling more than $1 million collectively. The [UNDP launched a 26-member Blockchain Advisory Group](https://www.undp.org/digital-innovation/news/undp-launches-blockchain-advisory-group-explore-blockchain-public-good) including SDF, with the inaugural meeting focused on financial inclusion and blockchain's role in expanding access to financial services. SDF held a [public Reddit AMA on June 2](https://www.reddit.com/r/Stellar/comments/1tre4zb/stellar_ama_sdfs_denelle_dixon_jos%C3%A9_fernandez_da/) with Denelle Dixon, Jose Fernandez da Ponte, and Tomer Weller. At Stable Summit, Tomer Weller [discussed](https://twitter.com/StellarOrg/status/2062637343324946718) what he described as "insane" RWA growth on Stellar this year. # Lightning Round * [LOBSTR launched a USDY promotion](https://twitter.com/lobstr/status/2062399788457635975) running June 5-18: swap any Stellar token to 10+ USDY and earn a 5 USDY reward, in partnership with Ondo Finance. * [SozuPay completed its Instawards grant](https://blog.telluscoop.com/p/instawards-stellar-chile-sozupay), delivering an NGO dashboard integrated with the Stellar Disbursement Platform for passkey-based USDC distributions. * [LumosDAO distributed June 1 LUMOS incentives](https://lumoscore.com/blogs/lumos-incentives-distribution-june-1st): 10.3M LUMOS to native LPs on Stellar and 15.8M on XRPL, with pool rewards across 10 projects per chain. * [Offer-Hub's marketplace demo](https://x.com/i/article/2062289167409897472) processed 82 registrations, 11 escrows, and 4 settlement transactions on Stellar without users managing wallets directly. * OSUM used Digibank and Stellar's bulk payment tool to [pay Syrian hospital staff](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dk9dtxU0W8c), cutting fees to 2% and delivery from months to minutes. * Istanbul Build On Stellar x RiseIn Hackathon winners [discussed their experience](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=viFpeIs6jy0) choosing Stellar for first blockchain projects, citing fast settlement and AI-assisted development tools. * A [SALT conference panel](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y18TuUexksw) on digital asset payments noted institutions are shipping stablecoin and tokenized securities products under existing law, ahead of Clarity Act passage. * NOWNodes [hosted an AMA on scaling crypto products](https://twitter.com/NOWNodes/status/2062882216720404482) with StellarOrg, ELLIPAL, SonicLabs, and Verge on June 5. * [DTCC's H1 2027 Stellar integration](https://www.coindesk.com/business/2026/05/31/how-stellar-became-part-of-dtcc-s-tokenization-push-for-wall-street-securities-onchain) continued drawing commentary, with Thinking Crypto and Crypto In America examining the $114 trillion custodian's multi-chain strategy. # Upcoming Events * **June 5** [Stellar Town Hall](https://discord.com/events/897514728459468821/1499821622356607010) (Discord) * **June 6** [MORPHO HACK: Demo Day + Cierre](https://luma.com/mvyzvssd) (virtual, ZEEK/BAF Network) * **June 8** [Opening Ceremony, Stellar37°](https://luma.com/drb7h32u) (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) * **June 8** [Builder Nights NYC: Agentic Frontier](https://luma.com/bnny) (Midtown Manhattan, NY) * **June 9** [Sunset Connections, Stellar37°](https://luma.com/abp6vnge) (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) * **June 10** [Builders Breakfast, Stellar37°](https://luma.com/25iytn9p) (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) * **June 11** [Stellar37° Pitch Night](https://luma.com/tjztlo0g) (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil) * **June 11** [Stellar Developers Meeting](https://discord.com/events/897514728459468821/1496911886321713163) (YouTube/Discord) * **June 11** [E. Africa Weekly Community Call](https://discord.com/events/897514728459468821/1483896022064435271) (Discord) * **June 15** [Morning Alpha: Etherfuse + Stellar](https://luma.com/lsgz54st) (CDMX) * **June 15** [VIP Taco Night: Etherfuse + Stellar](https://luma.com/c47709zl) (Ciudad de México) * **June 16** [The Stable Open](https://luma.com/8y662f4y) (Ciudad de México) * **June 17** [Marketers in the Arena: CDMX](https://luma.com/n1i32t84) (Ciudad de México) # Ambassador Activity **StarMaker LATAM** ran the Builder Stellar Tour in Veracruz (May 25) and organized an ideathon at Puna Tech in Salta, Argentina (May 28), reaching students and entrepreneurs at both events. **Stellar Brazil** is hosting Stellar37°, a multi-day series in Rio de Janeiro (June 8-11) organized with Nearx Innovation School, spanning an opening ceremony, builder sessions, and pitch night. **Stellar Chile** tracked Week 3 of the Sprint Instawards, with ArcusX and SozuPay both advancing through development milestones, and has a community call scheduled June 5. **Stellar Türkiye** co-hosted a mixer with SheFi Türkiye at Istanbul Blockchain Week (June 2) and a Stellar Party at Feriye Palace (June 4). # What to Watch * Protocol 27 SDK releases begin June 5. Confirm project dependencies are updated before testnet upgrade on June 18. * Stellar37° in Rio de Janeiro opens June 8. The June 11 pitch night is the Brazil chapter's first major builder showcase this quarter. * Morpho Studio Demo Day (June 6): Costa Rica builders from a 5-week Stellar program present, organized by BAF Network and StarMaker LATAM. * MGUSD is live across MoneyGram's network. Early adoption data will indicate how the migration from USDC tracks. * Stablecoin Conference CDMX (June 15-17): SDF and Etherfuse have multiple co-hosted side events confirmed, including The Stable Open on June 16. Window: 16 articles, 13 AV, 12 tweet signals. 22 upcoming events.
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post r/u_zeevedeeptech u/zeevedeeptech 2026-06-01
Tokenized deposits have passed the proof-of-concept phase. Banks now know they can put deposits on a blockchain. We now have enough precedents for [tokenized deposits](https://www.zeeve.io/use-cases/tokenized-deposits-digital-cash/) to be used as a valid payment rail globally. But the critical challenge is selecting the production infrastructure. The decision is not easy because tokenized deposits will still be the banks’ balance-sheet liabilities and must retain all existing legal, regulatory, and risk characteristics. Plus, add new capabilities like real-time settlement and programmable automation. A pilot can be launched on almost any ledger. But a production-grade system requires a long-term view. A dedicated enterprise deployment partner, like [Zeeve](https://www.zeeve.io/), can deliver [banking-grade blockchains](https://www.zeeve.io/industry/banks-capital-markets/), absolute data privacy, and global interoperability without leaving banks’ legacy systems.  This article helps banks make that decision more easily. It will answer all their queries, break down infrastructure decisions into 5 layers, and give architecture diagrams for tokenized deposit programs undertaken by banks.  # What are tokenized deposits?  A tokenized deposit is our standard, commercial bank deposit represented on a bank’s blockchain. Economically and legally, it is identical to off-chain deposits and maintains a 1:1 par exchange rate with fiat currency.  Source: [Federal Register](https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2026-06974/p-366) Hence, they are a direct claim on the balance sheet of the issuing commercial bank and fall under standard deposit insurance schemes such as the FDIC in the United States. Unlike [stablecoins](https://www.zeeve.io/use-cases/stablecoins-cbdc-style-digital-money/), they support the bank’s fractional-reserve policy and credit creation. The benefit is that by wrapping these liabilities in a [blockchain](https://www.zeeve.io/managed-custom-blockchain/) interface, banks can make commercial money programmable and highly mobile. It becomes capable of settling peer-to-peer 24/7/365 (atomic settlement) without relying on centralized, batch-processed clearinghouses like the Federal Reserve’s ACH, which pauses on weekends and holidays.  # For a deeper dive into who it benefits, the use cases where tokenized deposits bring more value, and the regulatory readiness worldwide, visit our detailed article: [Why Banks Need to Tokenize Deposits? Who Benefits?](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/why-banks-need-to-tokenize-deposits-who-benefits/)  # What does a tokenized deposit infrastructure actually mean? In a traditional bank, our balance sits inside a private SQL database or mainframe system called a Core [Banking Platform](https://www.zeeve.io/industry/banks-capital-markets/). This system cannot naturally read, see, or interact with a blockchain. The [tokenized deposit infrastructure](https://www.zeeve.io/use-cases/tokenized-deposits-digital-cash/) is the multi-layered technology stack built to bridge this specific gap, along with addressing the key concerns that arise because of blockchain introduction. For example, privacy & compliance, custody, [interoperability](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/superchain-erc20-simplifying-asset-interoperability-in-layer2-rollups), etc. Tokenized deposit infrastructure refers to the blockchain, middleware, [compliance](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/could-digital-product-passport-for-textiles-be-the-biggest-compliance-trend-this-year), privacy, integration, and operations stack required to issue, manage, and govern tokenized commercial [bank](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/why-the-stablecoin-vs-tokenized-deposits-war-is-a-costly-distraction-for-banks/) deposits. So if a bank asks what are the main infrastructure requirements for a tokenized deposit program, the answer  is not limited to token issuance, custody, or settlement alone. It includes the network architecture, [smart contract](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/a-comprehensive-guide-for-smart-contract-and-sovereign-rollups/) logic, participant controls, privacy mechanisms, compliance workflows, interoperability rails, integration with core banking systems, and the operational [layer](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/what-are-layer-2-rollup-networks-everything-you-need-to-know/) required to run the system reliably. # We can divide the entire tokenized deposit infrastructure into 2 primary building blocks and 5 subcategories # Architectural Archetype: 1. Network Infrastructure (Private Chains/permissioned, Public chains, Hybrid Networks 2. Ledger Model / Data Structure 3. Smart Contract & Token Architecture # Other Infrastructure Decisions: 1. Privacy & Compliance: Selective Disclosure, ZK  2. [Integration](https://www.zeeve.io/integrations/) Layer: with legacy core banking system through APIs + other enterprise connectivity (like Oracle, Digital asset custody stack like MPC, HSM, Account Abstraction, etc.), and interoperability with other banks and financial networks using [Hyperlane-like integrations](https://www.zeeve.io/hyperlane-integration/).  Now lets look into each of them one by one.  # Network infrastructure: Network infrastructure is the most important decision. Banks can use private or permissioned chains, public chains with institutional controls, or other hybrid models that combine public verifiability with private execution.  Each model has a different tradeoff between control, interoperability, cost, and ecosystem access.  1. Complete Public chains Public networks offer open infrastructure, broad developer ecosystems, liquidity, and composability. They are attractive when the bank wants to support multi-party [settlement](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/fizit-testnet-goes-live-real-time-b2b-settlements-built-for-the-industrial-world), tokenized securities, institutional [DeFi](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/how-appchains-fits-on-depins-vision-of-redefining-physical-infrastructure), or open network connectivity. The challenge here is control. Tokenized deposits cannot behave like permissionless bearer assets by default. Banks need allowlists, identity checks, sanctions screening, transaction limits, and issuer controls.  MAS Project Guardian showed that even when deposit tokens are used on a public blockchain, banks can restrict interactions to known addresses and require verifiable credentials.  Source: Onyx by J.P. Morgan Analysis So, Public chains can work when controls are built at the token, application, wallet, and RPC layers. They are best suited when interoperability and [ecosystem ](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/key-defi-ecosystem-pitfalls-solutions/)reach matter more than full infrastructure ownership. But banks must plan for transaction fee volatility, public metadata exposure, chain governance risk, and finality assumptions. A public-chain strategy should never start with the chain alone. It should start with the permissioning model. 1. Private and permissioned chains Private and permissioned chains give banks more control over participants, validators, access rules, and [data](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/blockchain-data-indexing-navigating-its-working-and-challenges/) visibility. These networks are easier to align with internal risk, audit, and [compliance](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/a-guide-to-blockchain-security-and-compliance) requirements. They also give more predictable performance and cost. This model works well for internal treasury settlement, closed-loop corporate payments, interbank consortium networks, and wholesale settlement among known institutions. Single-bank ledgers can support intra-bank transfers, and shared ledgers allow multiple institutions to interact on common rules and assets. The tradeoff is network reach. A private network may solve the bank’s internal settlement problem. It may not solve cross-bank interoperability unless other banks join or external bridges are built. Private infrastructure is the safest starting point for many banks. It is not always the best end state. The end state depends on how much external settlement the bank expects. 1. Hybrid networks / Custom-built public-permissioned chains Hybrid networks try to combine institutional control with broader connectivity.  So a hybrid chain could be  * Public chains with permissioned applications,  * Private execution with public anchoring,  * Privacy nodes connected to public liquidity, or  * Institutional networks with selective disclosure. J.P. Morgan’s JPMD/JPM Coin rollout on Base is a useful example. The asset runs on a public Ethereum [Layer 2](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/what-are-layer-2-rollup-networks-everything-you-need-to-know/), but is available to institutional clients and designed for regulated, permissioned use. Source: JP Morgan Let’s take an example of privacy-first public chains like Midnight or Hyli, which combine public-chain verifiability with confidentiality. They use [zero-knowledge](https://www.zeeve.io/zk-infrastructure/) proofs, selective disclosure, or proof-based settlement to let institutions prove validity without revealing underlying data like balances, counterparties, business logic, or transaction metadata.  Most of the examples in the market point in this direction.  Another example could be public chains with private institutional nodes like the Canton network or Rayls. These architectures give institutions private execution, private ledgers, or controlled nodes, but also connect them to a broader shared settlement or [interoperability layer](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/superchain-erc20-simplifying-asset-interoperability-in-layer2-rollups/). For tokenized deposits, hybrid infrastructure is useful when banks need privacy, auditability, and institutional governance, but also want future connectivity to public ecosystems. This can be a strong fit for interbank settlement, tokenized securities settlement, [cross-border](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/blockchain-in-cross-border-payments-a-game-changer/) liquidity, and regulated digital cash networks. If you want to understand how any of these models works or which could be best suited for your bank, schedule a no-cost discussion [call with Zeeve experts](https://www.zeeve.io/talk-to-an-expert/).  # Ledger model and data structure: They are primarily two types.  ‘ 1. Account-based ledgers Account-based ledgers are best for regulatory simplicity. Identity is attached to balances at the ledger or account layer. This maps well to existing [banking ](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/banking-the-unbanked-defi-promoting-financial-inclusion/)records, account ownership, customer due diligence, reconciliation, reporting, and internal controls. This model is useful when the bank needs every balance to map cleanly to a customer, corporate account, omnibus structure, or internal ledger. It is also useful for closed networks where participants are known and permissioned. 2. Token-based or UTXO-style ledgers Token-based ledgers represent value more directly in the token. In UTXO-like models, settlement can be structured around discrete spendable units. These models can be better for atomic settlement, DvP, PvP, and complex multi-party workflows where counterparties do not share the same account architecture. Blockchain deposits can also be native or non-native. Native records are blockchain records that act as the primary source of truth. Non-native records are on-chain mirrors of off-chain records. Native deposit [tokens](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/a-simple-and-comprehensive-guide-on-non-fungible-tokens) are promising because they are not limited by [off-chain](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/zeeve-partners-with-redstone-oracles-to-power-layer2-rollups-with-off-chain-data-integrations/) reconciliation processes and can use new blockchain functionality. A bank architecture may need both patterns. They can start with account-based issuance, where regulatory clarity matters most. Add token-based settlement where DvP, PvP, or cross-network atomicity matters. # Smart Contract & Token Architectures: The smart contract layer defines how tokenized deposits behave. They are not simple fungible [token deployments](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/introduction-to-token-standards-erc-20-erc-721-erc-777-and-erc-1155/). For tokenized deposits, smart contracts should support pre-settlement controls. These may include KYC status, sanctions results, wallet eligibility, transaction value, velocity limits, user role, geography, product type, and issuer approval. They must also support operational controls. These include maker-checker approvals, emergency pause, audited upgrades, key rotation, admin role separation, contract monitoring, and formal review. # What token standard should a bank use? The following [token standards](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/introduction-to-token-standards-erc-20-erc-721-erc-777-and-erc-1155/) can be used but one thing we need to keep in mind is, there is no universal token standard for tokenized deposits. The right standard depends on the use case type.  # ERC-20 Good for simple fungible transfers, but compliance must be added through custom controls. # ERC-1400 More suitable for regulated financial instruments because it supports partitions, operator controls, and forced transfers. # ERC-3643 / T-REX Useful where identity-linked transfer restrictions are required. Custom permissioned token contracts Often appropriate for bank-led or consortium-led networks where the participant set is closed, and role-based controls are more important than public composability. # Other Infrastructure Decisions # Privacy and compliance Infrastructure Privacy and data localization are one of the biggest corporate adoption challenges and one of the hardest parts of tokenized deposit infrastructure. Because,  * Banks cannot expose sensitive metadata of counterparties, volumes, pricing, and [supply chain](https://www.zeeve.io/industry/supply-chain/) information. Jurisdictions may restrict also where data can reside and who can see it. * At the same time, regulators, auditors, compliance teams, and internal control teams need visibility. That creates a design dilemma. The infrastructure must keep [transaction](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/whats-driving-the-massive-op-superchain-transaction-growth/) data confidential from unauthorized parties and also make the right data available to the right supervisory and control functions. For tokenized deposits, privacy must operate across multiple surfaces. It has to cover  * asset transfers.  * balances.  * smart contract execution. * identity checks.  * API access.  * RPC endpoints.  * observability logs and dashboards.  * disclosure workflows. This is the right framing because institutional privacy cannot be solved only at the token level. [Zeeve’s Privacy Layer](https://www.zeeve.io/zeeve-privacy-layer/) is a perfect solution to institutional privacy and compliance challenges. It treats privacy as modular middleware and can be integrated with any blockchain type below your application layer.  Learn More: [how confidential transactions (ZK), role based access, selective disclosure and private smart contracts work in Zeeve Privacy Layer.](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/what-does-privacy-in-blockchain-mean-for-financial-institutions/) These features of Zeeve privacy layer are useful here to keep sensitive data [private ](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/what-does-privacy-in-blockchain-mean-for-financial-institutions)without losing on-chain utility of tokenized deposits.  Because a private chain is not automatically a private workflow, privacy must be designed across the full system. Because even if your network is private, the [validators](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/everything-you-need-to-know-about-validator-nodes-a-deep-dive/) can still see the transactions and participants.  # Integration layer # Core banking integration infrastructure Tokenized deposit infrastructure does not replace core banking. It integrates with it. The core banking system remains the system of record for deposit liabilities, customer accounts, interest treatment, [regulatory](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/web3-and-blockchain-gaining-traction-in-india-startups-seek-regulatory-clarity) reporting, treasury management, and balance sheet controls. The blockchain layer becomes the programmable [settlement ](https://www.zeeve.io/use-cases/cross-border-settlement-rails/)environment. This needs [API](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/shared-apis-vs-dedicated-nodes-which-is-a-viable-option-for-your-dapp)\-based integration with legacy systems like, FIS, Finastra, Temenos, Mambu, in-house cores, treasury platforms, and compliance systems. REST APIs, webhooks, message queues, and event streams can connect [on-chain](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/how-enterprises-can-leverage-sui-blockchain-for-on-chain-asset-optimization/) actions with off-chain banking records. Every mint, transfer, and burn needs a corresponding entry in the bank’s system of record. This reconciliation architecture can take longer to design and test than the [smart contract](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/a-comprehensive-guide-for-smart-contract-and-sovereign-rollups/) layer. This is why banks should design reconciliation before choosing token standards. # Integration with external enterprise tools Tokenized deposits also need enterprise connectivity beyond core banking. * For example, institutional custody is critical. Banks need MPC, HSM, remote signing, key rotation, quorum approval, transaction policies, and recovery workflows.  * For corporate users, account abstraction can improve wallet usability, delegated approvals, role-based signing, and pre-programmed payments. * The policy engine should do KYC/AML screening before any [transaction ](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/parallel-transaction-execution-a-sneaky-update-in-hyperledger-besu-v24-7-1)settlement. The rules may include sender identity, receiver identity, balance, value threshold, velocity, sanctions result, jurisdiction, instrument type, business purpose, and approval status. * [Oracles](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/decentralized-oracles-supercharging-the-enterprise-rollup-adoption/) can be important when payment depends on external data like, any rates or prices, delivery confirmation, securities settlement status, collateral values, or any corporate workflow events. * Observability also matters. Banks need dashboards, logs, alerts, SLA monitoring, incident runbooks, transaction tracing, audit exports, and compliance evidence. And all these together builds the regulated [financial infrastructure](https://www.zeeve.io/industry/fintechs-and-payments/) for tokenized deposits. # Interoperability with other banks and financial networks Tokenized deposits create the most value when they can move across counterparties. A single-bank token can improve internal treasury movement. A shared ledger can improve settlement within a consortium. A broader interoperable network can support cross-bank [payments](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/blockchain-in-cross-border-payments-a-game-changer), tokenized securities settlement, [cross-border](https://www.zeeve.io/use-cases/cross-border-settlement-rails/) treasury, collateral mobility, and liquidity management. Interoperability will be needed between traditional finance systems and blockchains, across different chains, and with other assets on a given blockchain. But multiple bridging and wrapping can introduce operational and technical risk. This is where [Hyperlane-like integration](https://www.zeeve.io/hyperlane-integration/) concepts become relevant. Hyperlane is an interoperability framework that supports asset bridging and message passing across many chains and virtual machines and Zeeve enable this for its enterprise customers. A bridge that moves value but breaks compliance is not bank-grade interoperability. A messaging layer that carries instructions without legal finality is not enough either. KYC, AML, privacy and control has to be there in every layer.  Banks should ask early whether every new counterparty requires a [custom integration](https://www.zeeve.io/managed-custom-blockchain/) or whether the platform supports standardized connectivity from the start. # A decision table: What Questions Banks Should Ask a Tokenized Deposit Blockchain Infrastructure Provider? So when banks evaluate tokenized deposit infrastructure, they are really evaluating a full-stack infrastructure requirements: # How Zeeve helps banks deploy tokenized deposit infrastructure [Zeeve](https://www.zeeve.io/) helps banks design, deploy, and operate [tokenized deposit settlement infrastructure](https://www.zeeve.io/use-cases/tokenized-deposits-digital-cash/) across private, permissioned, public-permissioned, and hybrid architectures. The value starts with infrastructure advisory. Banks do not need to choose a stack in isolation. They need to match [architecture](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/how-3-layer-architecture-of-polygon-works-in-ethereum) with use case, privacy needs, regulatory obligations, transaction volume, finality needs, and interoperability goals. Zeeve can support banks across the full stack. * Multi-stack advisory across permissioned, public-permissioned, [rollup](https://www.zeeve.io/rollups/), [appchain](https://www.zeeve.io/appchains/), and hybrid architectures * Managed [blockchain network deployment](https://www.zeeve.io/blockchain-protocols/) and operations * [Zeeve Privacy Layer](https://www.zeeve.io/zeeve-privacy-layer/) * API and event integration with core banking, treasury, custody, and compliance systems * Interoperability support with other banks, financial networks, and [cross-chain](https://www.zeeve.io/blog/what-are-cross-chain-bridges-a-detailed-guide/) messaging layers * 24 by 7 monitoring, upgrades, observability, SLAs, and operational support The goal is to help banks launch tokenized deposits without forcing them into a single chain, a single architecture, or a disruptive replacement of core systems. If your bank is looking to launch a tokenized deposit program, [connect with Zeeve](https://www.zeeve.io/talk-to-an-expert/) to discuss how we can help!
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post r/RWATimes u/rwatimes 2026-05-18
![](https://www.livebitcoinnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/Stripe-and-Paradigm-Launch-Tempo-Blockchain-.png) Morpho is now live on Tempo, enabling idle stablecoins to generate yield through Sentora's pathUSD vault and Morpho's open credit markets. **Details:** - **Published:** 18/05/2026 20:50 (UTC) - **📊 Characteristics Score:** > **Asset Type:** *stable_coin* > **Sentiment:** `0.8` > **Entropy:** `0.75` > **Relevance:** `0.9` > **Staleness:** `0.3` > **Uncertainty:** `0.2` > **Level-1 Focus:** *integration-with-defi, infrastructure-providers, scalability* > **Level-2 Focus:** *rwa-collateral-lending, tokenization-platforms, institutional-capital-inflows* - **🏷️ Tags:** **#morpho** **#tempo** **#stablecoin yield** **#on-chain lending** **#sentora** **#pathusd vault** **#cbbtc collateral** **#chainlink** **#redstone oracles** **#institutional deployment** **Source:** https://rwatimes.io/articles/livebitcoinnews-morpho-and-tempo-just-opened-a-new-era-for-stablecoin-yield-markets-3661331471?utm_source=reddit&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=reddit --- *Posted from RWA Times Bot*
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post r/Redstonecrypto u/ShockedMan 2026-04-30
**Put together this infographic to map out what RedStone has been building lately, and it highlights a different side of oracles.** Most people still think of oracles as just “price feeds”, but this shows a bigger shift happening. RedStone’s stack is split into a few clear layers: * *Market + risk intelligence (basically making sense of assets, not just pricing them)* * *Oracle data (price feeds, FX, real-world data)* * *Delivery layer (modular, pull-based, works across 100+ chain*s) What stood out more to me though is *where it’s being used*. You’ve got integrations across: * *Real-world assets (tokenized asset pricing, infra support)* * *Institutional networks like Canton* * *Tokenized securities platforms like Securitize* * *Payment systems handling real-time FX* * *High-speed DeFi infra like MegaETH* So it’s not just DeFi anymore, it’s moving into TradFi rails and tokenization workflows. The timeline in the image is also interesting. Throughout 2025–2026, the focus seems very deliberate: * *Start with the RWA infrastructure* * *Move into institutional connectivity* * *Then expand into payments and high-speed DeFi* Feels less like random partnerships and more like a coordinated push into becoming a base layer for on-chain finance. Some numbers from the graphic: * *110+ chains supported* * *$6T+ in institutional assets connected* * *800+ tokenized securities* * *Sub-second data updates* If even part of this continues scaling, the role of oracles probably shifts from “data providers” to something closer to financial infrastructure. Curious how others here see it, especially compared to systems like Chainlink or Pyth Network. Are we moving toward a multi-oracle world with different specializations, or does one model eventually dominate?
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post r/RedStone_miners u/Smerfik5252 2026-04-28
2026 is the year tokenization moves from pilots to core capital markets. Institutions like [BlackRock](https://www.blackrock.com/) and [J.P. Morgan](https://www.jpmorgan.com/) are deploying. Over $30B is already on-chain, with projections pointing toward $400B. Stablecoins proved product-market fit. Now, capital is moving into real-world assets. But there is a structural gap. Real-world assets' core value proposition lies in DeFi composability: RWAs can serve as collateral in DeFi lending, enabling borrowing and leveraged yield. The existing infrastructure is inadequate to manage it for RWAs. DEX pools are too shallow, compliance restrictions eliminate permissionless liquidation, and redemption windows of 60 to 180 days make forced exits impossible. The larger the market grows, the more this constraint matters. It breaks the capital efficiency case for institutional RWA. RedStone Settle removes it by introducing an auction-based liquidation system. Instead of relying on open markets, RedStone Settle connects distressed positions with specialized, KYC-verified solvers. The winning solver closes the position instantly on-chain at T+0 while taking on the underlying asset off-chain. Built on RedStone Atom’s proven auction and oracle architecture, Settle integrates directly into lending protocols and enforces compliance by design. The result is a reliable way to liquidate RWA collateral, making lending against real-world assets finally viable at scale. RWAs are on-chain. Capital is moving. RedStone Settle enables RWA DeFi. **Learn more:** [**https://blog.redstone.finance/2026/04/28/redstone-settle-bringing-instant-settlement-to-real-world-assets-liquidations/**](https://blog.redstone.finance/2026/04/28/redstone-settle-bringing-instant-settlement-to-real-world-assets-liquidations/)
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post r/u_MorganaCitrini u/MorganaCitrini 2026-04-21
RedStone is as oracle that stays ahead of the curve, delivering not just data, but customized solutions that fit every client. [https://www.redstone.finance/](https://www.redstone.finance/) https://preview.redd.it/1jollkl61jwg1.png?width=680&format=png&auto=webp&s=14954b29e06835a5cf98fdb5fe4645dc37a4be8e