Australia Central Bank Backs Tokenization After $16.7B Pilot Finding
The Reserve Bank of Australia has put a hard number on tokenization: $16.7 billion in annual economic gains, with upside beyond that if new markets emerge.
RBA Assistant Governor Brad Jones cited those findings Wednesday, drawn from Project Acacia, a structured pilot that tested tokenized assets across Australia’s wholesale financial markets, not a whitepaper projection or a consultancy estimate.
This is a central bank quantifying economic value from a live experiment. That distinction matters.
Jones stated plainly that the question is no longer whether tokenization has a future, but how. That framing signals a policy posture shift, from exploratory to infrastructure-building — with the RBA now moving toward a formal digital financial market infrastructure sandbox.
- Pilot Scope: Project Acacia tested 20 tokenization use cases across asset classes including government bonds, repos, bank term deposits, and trade payables, settled via stablecoins, deposit tokens, and wholesale CBDC.
- Economic Quantification: RBA projects AUD 24 billion ($16.7 billion) in annual gains from RWA tokenization, with higher potential if new tokenized markets develop.
- Next Phase: RBA and the Digital Finance Cooperative Research Centre will launch a digital financial market infrastructure (DFMI) sandbox, moving from pilots toward commercialization-stage testing.
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The Mechanics: What Project Acacia Actually Tested
Project Acacia was not a simulation. It ran 20 discrete use cases across live asset classes, government bonds, repurchase agreements, bank term deposits, investment funds, trade payables, and mining royalties — settled through multiple instrument types: stablecoins, bank deposit tokens, wholesale CBDC, and exchange settlement accounts.
Participants included banks, custodians, fintechs, fund managers, stablecoin issuers, and infrastructure operators, testing settlement on both private and public distributed ledger technology platforms.
The $16.7 billion figure is anchored specifically to efficiency gains from automating asset lifecycle management, reducing manual settlement errors, compressing counterparty risk windows, and unlocking liquidity in fixed income markets.
Fixed income was a focal point because of its scale and its dependence on foreign investor capital, U.S. investors are currently Australia’s largest source of fixed income funding, and tokenized infrastructure could lower capital costs while improving secondary market liquidity.
The pilot also assessed how wholesale CBDC could be issued onto external ledgers, a technical test of interoperability between central bank settlement layers and commercial tokenization platforms. That is the infrastructure question the sandbox is designed to answer at commercial scale. The full findings from Jones’ address map out a sequenced path from pilot learnings to durable market infrastructure.
Industry showed strong appetite for tokenized private money throughout the process. The RBA noted that U.S. and European banks are already issuing deposit tokens in response to stablecoin competition, a dynamic the RBA expects to replicate domestically, with deposit tokens scaling for larger markets and stablecoins addressing smaller greenfield use cases.
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The Strategic Signal: Why a Central Bank’s Data Changes the Calculus
Central banks do not publish $16.7 billion economic projections as gestures.
The RBA’s quantification of tokenization upside is an institutional green light. The kind that moves compliance budgets, board-level risk appetites, and infrastructure investment timelines in ways that venture capital endorsements never do.
The precedent is already set. Singapore’s MAS BLOOM sandbox converted tokenized trade finance from concept to live deployment fast. Ripple joined with RLUSD and demonstrated exactly how quickly regulatory sandbox frameworks become production infrastructure. The RBA’s DFMI sandbox follows the same logic. Stage-gated testing designed to de-risk commercialization, not validate what is already known.
McKinsey forecasts tokenized asset value approaching $2 trillion by 2030. The RBA data gives that global trajectory a country-level economic mandate. ASIC head Joe Longo made the binary explicit in November. Seize the opportunity or get left behind. The RBA moving from research to sandbox infrastructure is the institutional answer to that ultimatum.
The structural risk is timing. Tokenized fixed income is advancing rapidly in the US. Australia’s dependence on foreign investors means isolated domestic development creates fragmentation risk, a scenario where Australian tokenized assets cannot interface with the global settlement layer already forming elsewhere. The sandbox’s cross-border payment research component addresses that directly but the window for seamless integration narrows as other jurisdictions lock in standards.
The rails are being built. Central banks from Canberra to Singapore to Washington are laying them simultaneously.
The only question that matters for active market participants is which projects are already positioned on those rails before institutional volume arrives.
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