Overlay

Money is going through one of the biggest transformations in history. As technology evolves, the financial ecosystem that powers everyday transactions must adapt to meet changing customer expectations and to accommodate new ways to pay.

 

Digital assets are a critical part of this shift. As they move from experimentation to mainstream, they are changing the very nature of money itself - how it moves, how transactions are settled and how banks and customers will operate in an increasingly digital “on-chain” world.

 

This transformation will take place over many years. At NatWest Group, we are building with that long-term future in mind by anticipating customer expectations and ensuring we stay ahead of the curve so that we’re exactly where they need us to be. This means investing in the right technology and working collaboratively across the industry so we can help lead this change by testing, learning and adapting at pace.

Delivering value for customers

 

As a trusted partner to our customers, it’s important that our approach evolves in line with their needs. While awareness of digital assets is growing, our recent research with retail customers shows that they lack knowledge and confidence in engaging with them*. In fact, more than 60% of those surveyed said they didn’t understand how digital assets worked*.

 

People expect payments to be easy - they don’t want to think about the technology behind their money, whether that’s core banking services, payment infrastructure or, in time, digital assets. Ensuring that the use of new technology remains seamless, safe and effortless is essential to retaining customer trust. This is why we’re committed to responsible innovation, placing education, confidence-building and protection at the heart of what we do.

We believe tokenised deposits, combined with programmability, are significant in the next phase of payments.

The next phase of innovation

 

Innovation works best when it is shared. Collaboration across the industry helps reduce fragmentation by avoiding operational complexity - and we’re working with our peers across the sector to play an active role in both UK and international pilots which are shaping the future of banking.

 

We believe tokenised deposits, combined with programmability, are significant in the next phase of payments. Bringing traditional currencies onto digital platforms and enabling payments to follow predefined rules - such as releasing money only when certain conditions are met – will give customers greater control over how and when money is used.

 

For example, retail customers using online marketplaces to buy anything from takeaways to clothes, typically see funds leave their account at the point of purchase. With programmability, funds can be instructed to be released only once an order has been delivered. For corporate and wholesale clients, programmability will simplify large and complex transactions with clear applications across trade finance, letters of credit, and processes like issuing or syndicating bonds.

As the financial landscape continues to shift, and customer expectations increasingly evolve, we’re investing and innovating to shape the future of payments.

To help bring this to life, we are testing several major initiatives with our peers and regulators. In the UK, the Great British Tokenised Deposit (GBTD) project is assessing how retail banks could support tokenised deposits for domestic payments. Internationally, Project Agora - led by the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), with over 40 commercial banks and seven central banks - is examining how tokenised deposits could improve cross border wholesale transactions.

 

NatWest Markets has also taken part in trials led by the European Central Bank, completing multiple tokenised transactions in 2024. Additionally, our work with Finteum’s FX platform has delivered improvements in liquidity management, enabling faster and more efficient foreign exchange transactions with our partners.

 

Digital assets with Lee McNabb

 

Learn more from Lee about the importance of digital assets and our approach to them at NatWest Group. 

Shorter-term benefits

In the shorter-term, we see the greatest opportunities for customer benefit emerging in Wealth, Capital Markets and Wholesale, where tokenised deposits and programmability can be used to settle trades - like exchanging securities for cash – more quickly and efficiently. At the same time, we’re supporting retail-focused innovation by providing core banking services to digital asset companies, including selected brokers and crypto-enabled payment providers.

 

While we work on the longer-term future of digital assets, we believe near-term benefits for retail customers will come from wider payment innovation that supports everyday spending. We are working with the industry on the next generation of infrastructure that will provide more choice and control in different payment methods such as open banking and account-to-account transactions. We will continue to improve the speed and transparency of cross-border solutions, helping to make everyday banking easy and future-proof.  

 

As the financial landscape continues to shift, and customer expectations increasingly evolve, we’re investing and innovating to shape the future of payments, while managing growing operational and regulatory demands. Introducing new forms of money will inevitably require greater resilience, yet the direction of travel is clear – we’re moving towards a “multi-money” world, and we need to be ready.

 

That also means considering the risks. Fragmentation across systems, standards and forms of money could undermine the very progress this innovation aims to achieve. That’s why it’s essential we approach this future with collaboration, clarity, and a deep focus on delivering the right outcomes for our customers.

Shaping the future of banking

Discover how we’re shaping the future of banking responsibly and sustainably with technology, data and AI.

Digital asset terms explained

*Research conducted for NWG by Potentia/Pegasus Insight

The material published on this page is for information purposes only and should not be regarded as providing any specific advice, or used by consumers to make financial decision. Terms and conditions apply to any products or services mentioned.

scroll to top