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    Home»Crypto News»JPMorgan taps both Ethereum and Solana for separate reasons for its institutional cash stack
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    JPMorgan taps both Ethereum and Solana for separate reasons for its institutional cash stack

    May 13, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
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    JPMorgan filed a prospectus on May 12 for the JPMorgan OnChain Liquidity-Token Money Market Fund, ticker JLTXX. The fund invests exclusively in US Treasury securities and overnight repo collateralized by Treasuries and cash, targeting a $1.00 net asset value.

    JPMorgan manages it to meet the eligible reserve asset requirements that stablecoin issuers may need under the GENIUS Act framework.

    The filing categorizes JLTXX as a regulated yield-bearing cash instrument designed to sit near the stablecoin reserve stack as a cash management tool for institutions, with neither the fund shares nor the token balances carrying a stablecoin classification.

    Ethereum is currently the only blockchain available to investors, though the filing anticipates expansion to other chains. Alongside Anchorage Digital’s concurrent Solana reserve initiative, in which JPMorgan is exploring a tokenized instrument solution, that expansion note reveals an architecture that goes beyond a hedge.

    JPMorgan is assigning different blockchains to different jobs in the institutional cash system, with Ethereum taking fund-share and ownership workflows and Solana targeted for reserve movement and treasury operations.

    Item Detail
    Fund name JPMorgan OnChain Liquidity-Token Money Market Fund
    Ticker JLTXX
    Filing date May 12
    Portfolio U.S. Treasury securities and overnight repo backed by Treasuries and cash
    NAV target $1.00
    Regulatory positioning Managed to meet eligible reserve-asset requirements stablecoin issuers may need under the GENIUS Act framework
    Blockchain at launch Ethereum only
    Access model Permissioned; only approved wallet addresses can be allow-listed
    Legal ownership record Investor Register maintained by the transfer agent
    Stablecoin interface Available only through Morgan Money
    Supported stablecoin USDC only
    What it is not Not a stablecoin; not a stablecoin issuer; not permissionless DeFi
    Why it matters A regulated, yield-bearing institutional cash instrument positioned near the stablecoin reserve stack

    How JPMorgan assigns each chain

    JLTXX is a public chain product wrapped in institutional controls. Only approved blockchain addresses can join the allow list, and only allow-listed addresses can purchase, redeem, or transfer token balances.

    The fund’s transfer agent keeps the official ownership record in traditional book-entry form inside the Investor Register, and that register determines legal ownership.

    Token balances provide holders with a mechanism to submit transaction requests, while legal title transfers only when the transfer agent updates the register. Stablecoin services are available only through Morgan Money, with USDC as the sole supported stablecoin.

    That construction demonstrates how JPMorgan uses Ethereum as a public chain for distribution and transaction requests in a tightly permissioned institutional product, where interoperability and future transferability flow from the chain, while legal ownership, identity, and operational control stays within traditional fund infrastructure.

    This follows the program JPMorgan established in December 2025 with MONY, its first tokenized money market fund, launched as a 506(c) private placement on public Ethereum through Morgan Money, powered by Kinexys Digital Assets.

    JLTXX extends that model into a registered fund accessible to a broader investor base. Two tokenized money market products on Ethereum, both wrapping short-duration Treasury exposure, both flowing through Morgan Money as the distribution and stablecoin interface point.

    Ethereum’s lead in tokenized assets reinforces the choice, as RWA.xyz shows Ethereum at approximately $17.63 billion in tokenized real-world asset value versus roughly $2.31 billion for Solana, and JPMorgan’s own tokenization materials note that most tokenized money market funds have launched on Ethereum.

    The Solana leg of the stack originates with Anchorage Digital’s May 5 announcement of a “Cashless Reserves” initiative. Stablecoin reserves would sit in yield-bearing, low-risk tokenized instruments on Solana, with on-demand liquidity serving redemptions from those continuously deployed assets.

    Anchorage said it is engaging with JPMorgan to explore a tokenized instrument solution supporting that framework, positioning JPMorgan as a potential instrument supplier to the reserve layer.

    Anchorage’s rationale for Solana is operational, as the network offers a high-throughput, low-latency infrastructure built for continuous settlement and asset movement.

    Visa’s stablecoin settlement pilot, operating across nine blockchains at a $7 billion annualized run rate, supports both Ethereum and Solana and frames Solana’s speed and cost structure as suited for payment and settlement rails.

    PayPal put PYUSD on Solana with the same logic, prioritizing throughput and cost efficiency over asset-record primacy.

    Ethereum vs. Solana in JPMorgan's institutional cash mapEthereum vs. Solana in JPMorgan's institutional cash map
    Ethereum holds $17.63 billion in tokenized RWA value versus Solana’s $2.31 billion, with each chain serving different functions in JPMorgan’s institutional cash architecture.

    The full cash stack and what it implies

    Read as individual products, MONY and JLTXX are tokenized money market funds. As components, they occupy specific layers inside a larger architecture JPMorgan has assembled over several years.

    Kinexys Digital Payments anchors the base as a permissioned blockchain system and deposit account ledger, processing more than $5 billion in real-time cross-border payments daily.

    That is the bank money and settlement control layer, operating inside JPMorgan’s institutional infrastructure. Above that, MONY and JLTXX convert short-duration Treasury exposure into on-chain fund shares accessible through Morgan Money, giving institutional clients a yield-bearing cash equivalent that can interact with blockchain-native workflows.

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    JLTXX’s optional USDC conversion through Morgan Money connects fund shares to the stablecoin economy while preserving the fund’s classification as a regulated money market instrument.

    The reserve operations layer is part of Anchorage’s Solana initiative, with JPMorgan exploring the instrument supply role for yield-bearing, fast-moving reserve assets held continuously on Solana.

    JPMorgan manages nearly $1.5 trillion in short-term assets as of Dec. 31, and the firm describes itself as the world’s number-one institutional money market manager.

    When the world’s largest institutional liquidity manager files a tokenized government money market fund for the stablecoin reserve stack and simultaneously explores reserve operations infrastructure on Solana, the full stack is the relevant unit of analysis.

    Layer JPMorgan-related component Chain / rail Core function Why it matters
    Settlement control layer Kinexys Digital Payments Permissioned JPMorgan rail Real-time payments and settlement control Base layer for bank-money movement inside JPMorgan infrastructure
    Yield-bearing cash layer MONY Ethereum Tokenized money market fund shares First Ethereum-based tokenized fund wrapper for short-duration Treasury exposure
    Yield-bearing cash layer JLTXX Ethereum Registered tokenized government money market fund Extends JPMorgan’s tokenized cash offering to a broader institutional product
    Stablecoin interface layer Morgan Money + USDC conversion Ethereum / stablecoin rail Connects tokenized fund shares to stablecoin users Lets institutions move between regulated fund exposure and the stablecoin economy
    Reserve operations layer Anchorage “Cashless Reserves” initiative with JPMorgan exploring tokenized instrument support Solana Just-in-time liquidity and reserve movement Positions Solana as the faster operational rail for stablecoin treasury management
    Strategic takeaway Multi-chain institutional cash architecture Ethereum + Solana + private bank rail Different chains assigned to different jobs Suggests institutions may build a cash stack, not choose a single blockchain winner

    The scenarios for JPMorgan’s stack

    The bull case is that the GENIUS Act stablecoin regulation creates institutional demand for exactly the kind of reserve instrument JLTXX is designed to be.

    Stablecoin issuers need yield-bearing, compliant reserve assets, and JPMorgan would supply them through an Ethereum-based fund while Anchorage’s Solana model handles reserve movement and just-in-time liquidity.

    The two-chain architecture appears well positioned, and JPMorgan captures a large share of the institutional cash management layer in the stablecoin economy.

    In that scenario, the filing’s expansion clause becomes consequential, since JLTXX could expand to Solana itself, collapsing the window between fund share distribution and reserve operations into a single institutional instrument.

    The bear case is that operational fragmentation across two blockchains, multiple control systems, and a single stablecoin interface proves too cumbersome for adoption at scale.

    Allow-lists, transfer-agent control, Morgan Money as the sole stablecoin gateway, and a separate Solana reserve layer ask institutions to manage more moving parts than a bank-rail solution demands.

    The JLTXX filing itself is evidence of the control overhead. The Investor Register, the allow list, and the stablecoin service restrictions each introduce operational dependencies that are foreign to simpler bank products.

    In that world, JLTXX stays a niche wrapper, the Solana reserve model stays exploratory, and Kinexys absorbs more institutional settlement volume behind permissioned rails.

    Both scenarios run on how broadly stablecoin reserve demand grows under regulation and how quickly eligible reserve asset standards get finalized. Until that regulatory shape is clear, JPMorgan’s stack reads as a well-constructed option.

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