Doha Bank issues $150 million digital bonds through European Central Bank's DLT platform

Doha Bank recently completed a $150 million digital bond issuance, utilizing distributed ledger technology (DLT) infrastructure provided by the European Central Securities Depository (CSD) to achieve same-day issuance and settlement. This case demonstrates that in regulated capital markets, permissioned DLT platforms are gradually becoming the mainstream choice for institutional tokenized debt issuance, rather than relying entirely on public blockchains.

The digital native bonds were listed on the International Securities Market (ISM) of the London Stock Exchange and settled instantly through the European Central Securities Depository’s digital financial market infrastructure. The platform is operated by a central securities depository, belonging to a regulated, permissioned DLT system that balances efficiency improvements with compliance requirements. Standard Chartered Bank served as the sole global coordinator and sole bookrunner for this transaction, responsible for bond structuring, execution, and full issuance process.

In recent years, banks and regulators in the Middle East and Asia have accelerated the adoption of permissioned DLT platforms to facilitate digital bond issuance, ensuring regulatory control and legal certainty. While some institutions (such as DBS Bank) have experimented with tokenization on public blockchains like Ethereum, the overall trend still leans toward leveraging regulated infrastructure to realize the benefits of tokenization within a compliant framework.

Doha Bank stated that this digital bond issuance reflects the practical value of next-generation digital capital market infrastructure in enhancing efficiency, including T+0 settlement, automated record-keeping, and streamlined processes, while meeting institutional investors’ security and compliance requirements. The European Central Securities Depository also noted that this transaction proves DLT can significantly reduce friction and settlement times without sacrificing market standards and investor protections.

This case also highlights a broader path toward capital market modernization within the region, embedding DLT within existing market systems rather than building standalone crypto-native platforms. Platforms like HSBC’s Orion and J.P. Morgan’s Kinexys (formerly Onyx) are committed to interoperability with existing clearing, custody, and post-trade infrastructure, driving digital bonds from pilot projects toward scalable applications.

As more banks incorporate DLT into traditional debt issuance processes, digital bonds are gradually becoming an important component of Middle Eastern and Asian capital markets, with tokenization moving from proof of concept to real market deployment. (CoinDesk)

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