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- Chainlink, JPMorgan’s Kinexys, and Ondo Finance successfully completed a cross-chain Delivery versus Payment transaction.
- Chainlink now gives banks a secure space where smart contracts can interact directly, using its Runtime environment.
Last week, an exciting step forward for real-world asset (RWA) adoption quietly unfolded, and it involved some major names: Chainlink, JPMorgan’s Kinexys, and Ondo Finance. As reported by Crypto News Flash, the three collaborated on a test transaction that showcased how institutional finance and blockchain can finally speak the same language.
As part of this partnership, they used a concept called Delivery versus Payment (DvP). This is a financial process used to ensure that one asset is only delivered once payment is received. It’s essential for eliminating settlement risk, especially in high-stakes institutional trading. But this time, the test wasn’t happening on traditional rails; it was carried out across blockchains.
In this cross-chain demo, Ondo Finance initiated the process by locking up a portion of its OUSG tokenized U.S. Treasury fund, which is valued at a massive $692 million, on its Ondo Chain testnet. Simultaneously, JPMorgan’s Kinexys Digital Payments Network queued a corresponding cash transaction on its permissioned ledger. Both sides of the transaction were coordinated in real-time by Chainlink’s Runtime Environment (CRE), a new off-chain automation layer built to manage complex processes across public and private chains securely.
Why does this matter?
Right now, we’re trying to run tomorrow’s finance on yesterday’s infrastructure. Despite the fact that tokenized assets on public blockchains, like tokenized U.S. Treasuries, real estate, and stablecoins, have already surpassed $22 billion in value, they’re still being settled like it’s 1995.
Most of these transactions rely on siloed legacy systems, overnight batch settlements, and endless reconciliations between disconnected ledgers, often crossing fingers that line items actually match. That’s not just inefficient; it’s risky, slow, and expensive.
As a solution, Chainlink’s CRE works behind the scenes as a smart, reliable layer that helps different financial systems talk to each other. Instead of relying solely on on-chain smart contracts, CRE handles the heavy lifting off-chain, running complex logic in a more flexible way, while still ensuring everything is secure and verifiable through cryptographic proofs and Chainlink’s trusted oracle network.
This setup allows it to track activity across both public blockchains and private, permissioned ledgers, automate transactions like asset swaps or settlements, and even connect with older financial systems like RTGS or SWIFT using standardized APIs. As we explained in an article, CRE ensures atomicity, meaning a transaction only goes through if both sides are ready, reducing risk and making settlements faster and safer for everyone involved.
The next step for this collaboration is launching production pilots later this year. These won’t just be controlled test environments or simulations. Instead, they’ll involve larger trade sizes and real money on actual balance sheets. That means the financial institutions involved will be putting real skin in the game to prove that blockchain can handle the complexity and scale of real-world transactions.
Chainlink (LINK) has seen a modest pullback over the past 24 hours, slipping by 3.05% to trade at $13. It’s now testing a crucial support level near $13.20, a zone that traders are watching closely. If LINK fails to hold above this support, it could signal a deeper dip ahead. Key levels to watch include $12.80; if that breaks, the next stops could be around $12.20 or even $11.