• Australian digital asset manager, JellyC, has teamed up with crypto exchange OKX and international banking giant Standard Chartered in a bid to enhance institutional access to digital asset investing in Australia.
  • JellyCs initiative will see it use Franklin Templetons tokenised money market fund as off-exchange collateral to trade on OKX, with Standard Chartered providing custody services.
  • JellyC says this initiative will enhance its capital efficiency and provide a safe and compliant solution for institutions in Australia to invest in digital assets.

Aussie digital asset investment firm JellyC has joined a new collateral mirroring program that enables lower-risk institutional trading via the OKX exchange with asset custody handled by global investment bank Standard Chartered.  

JellyC, which offers regulated funds designed to give institutional investors exposure to digital assets, will utilise Franklin Templetons tokenised money market fund (TMMF) as off-exchange collateral for trading on OKX. In addition to the TMMF, cryptocurrencies may also be used as trading collateral to a lesser extent.

In a statement to Crypto News Australia, JellyC said the initiative significantly enhances [its] capital efficiency&while maintaining the highest standards of security. Working with mirrored capital, rather than funds held in a third-party wallet, will allow the firm to quickly deploy capital for trading with less risk.

JellyCs CEO Michael Prendiville, said the arrangement will see institutional digital asset investing in Australia brought up to the same standards of safety and rigour that TradFi has been held to for decades.

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Marrying the Franklin TMMF with the Standard Chartered and OKX tripartite collateral structure elevates safety and soundness to a level akin to traditional finance, making this fit for purpose in a digital world.

Michael Prendiville, JellyC CEO

Standard Chartered and OKX announced the collateral mirroring programme in April. It lets firms utilise cryptocurrencies and tokenised money market funds as off-exchange collateral for trading. Franklin Templetons TMMF is the first of what is expected to be many money market funds to be able to be used as collateral under the programme.

By leveraging Standard Chartereds position as a top custodian globally, as well as OKXs market leadership in cryptocurrency trading, the partnership sets an industry standard for current and potential institutional clients to deploy trading capital at scale in a trusted environment.

Hong Fang, President of OKX

JellyCs investment products include funds aimed at the wealth and funds management sector and the Superannuation industry in Australia. 

We are witnessing an increasing institutional demand for digital asset trading solutions that leverage established banking infrastructure, ensuring secure and compliant capital deployment in crypto markets, Prendiville said.

Related: Franklin Templeton Funds Token Effort, Expands $410M to Ethereum Blockchain

Franklin Templeton was among the first major fund managers to tokenise a money market fund, launching its Franklin OnChain US Government Money Fund (FOBXX) back in 2021. At that time it was the first US-registered mutual fund using a public blockchain to record transaction and ownership information.

Initially FOBXX launched on the Stellar blockchain, but it has since expanded to Avalanche, Base, Aptos and Ethereum. Both institutional and retail investors are able to access FOBXX by buying BENJI tokens, which represent ownership of the fund.

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Image Source: rwa.xyz

At the time of writing, data from real-world asset tracking website rwa.xyz showed FOBXX was the second largest tokenised US Treasury fund, with a market cap of just over US$764 million (AU$1.1 billion) behind only BlackRocks BUIDL fund which has a market cap of US$2.4 billion (AU$3.68 billion).

Money market funds have become a popular target for tokenisation because they offer many of the benefits of stablecoins they maintain a stable value, are transferable, can easily be used as collateral and can have existing on and off ramps to TradFi.

However, TMMFs have some advantages over stablecoins which often make them more attractive to institutional investors. Theyre regulated securities, they can pay yield directly to shareholders, and are only available to investors whove passed KYC/AML checks. 

TMMFs also have better transparency than most stablecoins, as the funds can only be backed by a certain subset of low risk assets and investors are able to access daily reporting on fund statuses.

Essentially, TMMFs function very much like stablecoins but with enhanced investor protections.