At the Singapore Fintech Festival on Tuesday, JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM) and Apollo took a significant step toward revolutionizing wealth management by demonstrating a blockchain-based proof of concept. The event, part of Project Guardian led by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), showcased the potential for managing large client portfolios, executing trades, and automating portfolio management through tokenization on blockchain platforms.
The collaboration involved key players in the blockchain and financial services sectors, including Onyx Digital Assets, Axelar, Oasis Pro, and Provenance Blockchain. The demonstration highlighted how wealth managers could effectively purchase and rebalance positions in tokenized assets across multiple chains.
JPMorgan's Onyx Digital Assets shared their vision for pioneering portfolio management with Crescendo, a prototype designed to disrupt the asset and wealth management industry. Crescendo represents an integrated platform that allows a portfolio manager to administer a multitude of discretionary portfolios. These portfolios consist of tokenized traditional and alternative investments across blockchains while preserving account distinctiveness.
The initiative is poised to enhance efficiencies for asset and wealth managers as well as investors by offering personalized, scalable portfolios. Anthony Moro, CEO of Provenance Blockchain, acknowledged the demonstration as a unique blockchain interoperability solution tailored for institutional financial services. He noted that Provenance Blockchain has already supported over $16 billion in transactions and currently holds $9 billion in real-world financial assets on-chain.
This move comes as traditional finance institutions increasingly embrace blockchain technology. Earlier this year, firms like Charles Schwab (NYSE:SCHW), Citadel Securities, and Fidelity Investments expressed their growing interest by launching cryptocurrency exchange EDX Markets. In October, JPMorgan completed its first live blockchain-based collateral settlement transaction with BlackRock (NYSE:BLK) and Barclays (LON:BARC).
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