YuzuMoneyX, an institutional yield platform, has completed a security review and migrated to Chainlink’s Cross-Chain Interoperability Protocol (CCIP) to distribute its yield products across multiple blockchains without using traditional bridges. The move comes as over $2.8 billion has been lost to bridge hacks since 2021. CCIP uses Chainlink’s Risk Management Network to provide risk-managed, programmable cross-chain transfers. The migration reflects growing demand in 2026 for audited, oracle-based interoperability as institutions and regulators push for safer cross-chain settlement and tokenized asset infrastructure.
YuzuMoneyX, an institutional yield platform, has migrated its cross-chain messaging and token transfer layer to Chainlink’s CCIP after a security evaluation. The shift allows the platform to deliver institutional yield products across various blockchains without using traditional bridges.
Chainlink operates the leading decentralized oracle network and developed CCIP to enable programmable, cryptographically verified interoperability between public and private chains. The migration occurs amid widespread bridge attacks; Chainalysis reports over $2.8 billion lost to such attacks since 2021.
CCIP combines Chainlink’s Risk Management Network with programmable token transfers to offer a risk-managed solution. This is essential for fund managers, brokers, and exchanges moving tokenized yield products across Ethereum, Arbitrum, and other EVM chains while maintaining regulatory compliance. For developers, CCIP provides a single cross-chain logic standard, reducing smart contract fragmentation.
Institutional adoption of DeFi has been largely blocked by interoperability issues. CCIP represents an improvement over ad-hoc bridges by using cryptographically secured communication and execution. YuzuMoneyX’s migration enables it to extend distribution to more chains and institutional partners.
The integration signals that experimental bridges are giving way to well-audited, oracle-based interoperability as the norm for institutional DeFi. Regulators are increasingly focusing on counterparty risk and settlement finality in cross-chain scenarios, as external sources highlight. This move is one of a series of actions by institutions expecting enterprise-standard infrastructure for tokenized asset settlement and custody.
