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    UK bond fund ownership records move onto Ethereum and Solana

    A UK investment manager with over £286 billion ($377B) in assets under management is testing a sharper version of fund tokenization with BAGEY: public blockchains are being used as part of the record that says who owns a regulated UK fund.

    That finally moves the tokenization debate into fund administration rather than distribution alone. A tokenized fund can still be a blockchain-shaped claim on a conventional product whose decisive ownership record sits elsewhere.

    Baillie Gifford is presenting a stronger model, one where the on-chain record forms part of the legal ownership register itself.

    In that version, the token becomes the way an investor’s holdings are recorded. The consequence is tangible: if regulated fund ownership can live natively on public chains, the change is in the fund administration stack, not in crypto market exposure.

    Baillie Gifford’s digital assets material frames tokenization as an upgrade to ownership records, settlement, access, and client outcomes. The appeal is that records and processes can move differently when ownership is represented on shared rails.

    The launch answers one narrow, tokenized-fund question with a qualified yes: regulated funds are moving toward legal infrastructure on public chains, rather than blockchain-wrapped versions of existing products.

    The model still has to prove it can support secondary transfers, around-the-clock settlement, or collateral use outside a controlled primary-market setting.

    Infographic showing how BAGEY connects investors, native fund tokens, public-chain records, a UK-regulated OEIC, and service-provider controls, with open proof points for legal finality, transfer restrictions, wallet recovery, liquidity, and collateral acceptance.Infographic showing how BAGEY connects investors, native fund tokens, public-chain records, a UK-regulated OEIC, and service-provider controls, with open proof points for legal finality, transfer restrictions, wallet recovery, liquidity, and collateral acceptance.

    Native issuance shifts the ownership record

    The central claim around BAGEY is native issuance. Baillie Gifford described it as a fully native UK-regulated tokenized fund operating through a UK-regulated OEIC structure, with issuance on Ethereum and Solana, BNY providing tokenization and wallet infrastructure, and NatWest Trustee and Depositary Services acting as depositary.

    If the blockchain is the legal register, then the fund administrator, custodian, transfer agent, depositary, and investor are coordinating around more than a private database that later reconciles with a token.

    The shared ledger becomes part of the record that says who owns what.

    That is materially different from a tokenized wrapper. A wrapper can give investors blockchain-based access to a fund exposure while leaving the legally decisive register inside traditional infrastructure.

    It can still be useful, but the operational center of gravity stays off-chain. BAGEY’s more important claim is that the record layer itself has moved.

    Model Where ownership lives What the token does Main question
    Native tokenized fund The on-chain record is presented as part of the fund ownership register Records the investor’s direct holding in the regulated fund Can legal, custody, transfer, and recovery controls hold up in production?
    Tokenized wrapper A separate fund or administrator record remains the decisive source Represents access to an off-chain product Does the wrapper add real utility beyond distribution?
    Crypto exposure product Traditional product records remain central Gives exposure to a token, chain, or related strategy How does the asset price perform?

    That distinction keeps LINK, ETH, and SOL price action secondary. Chainlink amplified the launch, and Ethereum and Solana provide the public-chain infrastructure, but the news centers on whether fund ownership can be recorded natively on shared public ledgers inside a regulated structure.

    The UK backdrop turns tokenization into fund plumbing

    The UK backdrop is central. The Financial Conduct Authority published PS26/7 on fund tokenization on April 30, setting out how authorized fund managers can use distributed ledger technology within the existing authorized-fund framework.

    The policy statement covers tokenized fund models and DLT-based unitholder registers, giving BAGEY a regulatory setting beyond an isolated product launch.

    CryptoSlate previously covered the UK’s move to approve tokenization of FCA-authorized investment funds. That earlier shift matters because BAGEY now puts a specific asset manager, fund structure, service-provider stack, and public-chain implementation behind the policy direction.

    UK approves tokenization of FCA-authorized investment fundsUK approves tokenization of FCA-authorized investment funds
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    Nov 24, 2023 · Assad Jafri

    It also follows tokenized-fund experiments in which Chainlink, Swift, UBS, and others tested subscriptions and redemptions, as well as transfer-agent automation. Those pilots showed that traditional fund workflows could be connected to blockchain systems.

    Chainlink, Swift and UBS succesfully pilot tokenized fund solution to revolutionize $100 trillion industryChainlink, Swift and UBS succesfully pilot tokenized fund solution to revolutionize $100 trillion industry
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    Sep 30, 2025 · Assad Jafri

    BAGEY pushes the question further. The relevant issue is whether the record of regulated fund ownership can sit natively on public-chain infrastructure, rather than whether one workflow can be automated.

    For asset managers, that changes the proof burden. A tokenized fund wrapper can be judged by access, distribution, and investor demand.

    A native fund record has to be judged by legal finality, operational resilience, controls around eligible holders, failed or mistaken transfers, wallet loss, sanctions screening, redemption timing, and the point at which a blockchain entry becomes enforceable against the fund.

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