Provable Markets joins DTCC Industry Working Group
24 June 2026 US
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Provable Markets has joined the DTCC Industry Working Group for the Depository Trust Companys (DTCs) tokenisation service.
The group has over 50 custodians, broker-dealers, asset managers, and trading venues working through the operational and technical workflows the service will run on.
As tokenised assets gain momentum, Provable Markets says participants of every perspective have a stake in shaping the infrastructure and workflows around them preserving what already works in existing market structure, finding where tokenisation genuinely enhances it, and keeping both inside the rigorous framework the US capital markets operate under.
We joined because this is where those standards take shape, in coordination with the center of the US market DTC. That is the layer we operate in, the firm adds.
Settlement on a T+1 cycle requires participants to hold excess collateral as a timing buffer; atomic settlement changes that calculus.
Bilateral agreements that today depend on proprietary connectivity and manual lifecycle steps could operate more efficiently if the underlying assets carry programmable, chain-native properties.
DTC's tokenisation service creates the regulated infrastructure context in which those improvements become operationally viable, the firm comments.
The group has over 50 custodians, broker-dealers, asset managers, and trading venues working through the operational and technical workflows the service will run on.
As tokenised assets gain momentum, Provable Markets says participants of every perspective have a stake in shaping the infrastructure and workflows around them preserving what already works in existing market structure, finding where tokenisation genuinely enhances it, and keeping both inside the rigorous framework the US capital markets operate under.
We joined because this is where those standards take shape, in coordination with the center of the US market DTC. That is the layer we operate in, the firm adds.
Settlement on a T+1 cycle requires participants to hold excess collateral as a timing buffer; atomic settlement changes that calculus.
Bilateral agreements that today depend on proprietary connectivity and manual lifecycle steps could operate more efficiently if the underlying assets carry programmable, chain-native properties.
DTC's tokenisation service creates the regulated infrastructure context in which those improvements become operationally viable, the firm comments.
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