Thursday, January 8

Crypto Reporter

Shalini Nagarajan

Crypto Reporter

Shalini Nagarajan

Part of the Team Since

Jan 2024

About Author

Shalini is a crypto reporter who provides in-depth reports on daily developments and regulatory shifts in the cryptocurrency sector.

Last updated: 

Barclays has taken its first equity stake in a stablecoin-related company, buying into US-based Ubyx as the British lender steps up work on what it calls “new forms of digital money”.

Ubyx, launched in 2025, sells itself as a clearing layer for stablecoins, the tokens pegged one for one to fiat currencies.

The pitch is straightforward, make stablecoins easier to settle and redeem across issuers, so a token from one brand does not get treated like a different kind of money from another.

Barclays said the bank and Ubyx are committed to developing “tokenized money within the regulatory perimeter,” according to a Reuters report Wednesday.

Ubyx Stake Aligns With Barclays’ Push Into Regulated Tokenized Cash

A bank spokesperson added, “This investment aligns with Barclays’ approach to explore opportunities based on new forms of digital money, such as stablecoins.” Barclays did not disclose the size of the stake or Ubyx’s valuation.

The deal lands as markets keep rewarding the idea that tokenization is moving from pilot projects to production, especially in payments.

For Barclays, the Ubyx stake also fits a broader industry pattern, big banks want exposure to stablecoin rails without stepping outside compliance lines.

Regulators Press Limits As Stablecoins Move Toward Wider Use

In October, Barclays joined a group of 10 banks exploring the issuance of a 1 to 1 reserve-backed form of digital money tied to G7 currencies, another signal that lenders want a seat at the table if stablecoins become standard settlement plumbing.

Stablecoins already sit at the centre of crypto market liquidity, even if most usage still happens inside trading venues rather than at shop checkouts.

Tether remains the largest issuer, with about $187B of tokens in circulation, a reminder of how quickly privately issued dollars have scaled once crypto users found product-market fit.

Ubyx has attracted crypto-native backers too. Reuters cited PitchBook data showing earlier investment from the venture arms of Coinbase and Galaxy Digital, giving the startup a blend of traditional finance interest and crypto capital.

Regulators, at the same time, keep pressing the risk questions that banks cannot ignore. The Bank of England has floated holding limits for systemic stablecoins, partly to reduce the chance that money drains from bank deposits into private tokens during stress, even as it builds a wider rule set with the Financial Conduct Authority.

That tension is the point of the current cycle for stablecoins. Banks want faster settlement and programmable cash, regulators want stability and clear lines of responsibility, and infrastructure players like Ubyx are trying to make the rails look familiar enough that regulated institutions will actually use them.



https://cryptonews.com/news/barclays-stablecoin-investment-ubyx-stake/

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