Franklin Templeton and Binance have launched an institutional program allowing traders to use tokenized money market fund shares as collateral on the exchange. This structure enables large clients to engage in trading while their underlying assets remain securely held in regulated custody off-platform, addressing counterparty risk concerns. The move represents a significant step in integrating traditional finance with crypto market infrastructure through tokenization.
Franklin Templeton and Binance have introduced a new program allowing institutional clients to use tokenized shares of the asset manager’s money market funds as trading collateral. This model allows large traders to execute positions on Binance while their pledged assets stay in secure, off-exchange custody, solving a key concern about counterparty risk following major exchange failures.
Custody and settlement for the program are managed by Binance‘s institutional custody partner, Ceffu. This approach reduces custody costs and counterparty risk while allowing the pledged assets to generate yield, a contrast to idle balances on trading platforms, thereby increasing capital efficiency.
The initiative fits a broader trend of asset managers and banks adapting existing cash products for on-chain use. Franklin Templeton has been updating its money market funds to support on-chain settlement, including structures aligned with U.S. stablecoin reserve requirements, creating a pathway between traditional finance and digital token markets.
This development coincides with shifting regulatory perspectives, as noted by SEC Commissioner Mark Uyeda, who stated regulators should avoid creating “unnecessary roadblocks” to tokenization’s advancement. The partnership establishes a model combining yield, safety, and liquidity, potentially setting a new standard for institutional capital deployment in crypto.

