JPMorgan Chase has filed a trademark application for "JPMD," sparking speculation about a potential stablecoin rollout.
Author: Sahil Thakur
Written On: Tue, 17 Jun 2025 07:51:30 GMT
JPMorgan Chase has filed a trademark application for “JPMD,” sparking speculation about a potential stablecoin rollout.
Submitted on June 15 to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, the filing describes JPMD as a service for trading, exchanging, transferring, and facilitating payments in digital assets. The bank hasn’t commented publicly yet, but the move aligns with increasing interest in stablecoins across Wall Street and Silicon Valley.
JPMorgan first embraced blockchain in 2016 with its Quorum platform. This led to the 2019 release of JPM Coin, a stablecoin used in institutional settlements and enabling roughly $1 billion in daily network transfers via its Onyx/Quorum infrastructure. In 2020, it consolidated these efforts under its Onyx and Kinexys units to support tokenized repo trades and large-scale settlement operations. More recently, under CEO Jamie Dimon, the bank allowed clients to buy Bitcoin within JPMorgan accounts (though not directly custodied by the bank) and now has filed the “JPMD” trademark—suggesting an expansion into stablecoin issuance or broader crypto services.
JPMorgan’s move comes amid growing U.S. regulatory clarity for stablecoins. The bipartisan GENIUS Act (Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act) sets key standards: stablecoins must be fully backed, feature anti-money-laundering compliance under the Bank Secrecy Act, prioritize holders in bankruptcy, and exclude unregulated foreign stablecoins. The Senate previously passed cloture with a 66–32 vote in May and cleared a 68–30 procedural hurdle. The full Senate is expected to vote on final passage imminently. Should it pass, it will go to the House for reconciliation, then to the President for approval.
The trademark filing fell on June 15—just ahead of a scheduled Senate vote on the GENIUS Act. That timing could be strategic. A stablecoin framework would give JPMorgan’s potential JPMD issuance a clear legal foundation. Meanwhile, other big financial names—Citigroup, Wells Fargo, and Bank of America—have also reportedly explored issuing a joint bank-backed stablecoin. Tech firms including Meta, Apple, and Google, along with asset managers like Fidelity, are also actively researching stablecoin integration.
Details remain scarce on whether JPMD would be a full-fledged stablecoin, payment rail, or broader asset management tool. Yet the filing signals JPMorgan’s intent to deepen its digital asset engagement. It’s the next step in a trajectory that began with blockchain infrastructure, advanced via their own token, and now enters regulated tokenized finance.
As this traditional banking giant expands in tokenized finance, its moves may shape how stablecoins are adopted and regulated globally.
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