On March 6, it was announced that the Bank of Canada recently released the testing results of the blockchain pilot project “Samara.” The experiment successfully issued and managed a tokenized government bond worth CAD 100 million. This pilot used distributed ledger technology to complete the full lifecycle of the bond, from issuance and trading to settlement, aiming to evaluate the potential applications of blockchain technology in traditional capital market infrastructure.
In this project, Export Development Canada (EDC) served as the bond issuer, with several major financial institutions participating in the testing, including RBC Capital Markets, RBC Investor Services, TD Bank Group, and TD Securities. During the pilot, bond transactions were settled through wholesale Canadian dollar deposits at the central bank, simulating a real financial environment where blockchain systems operate in coordination with central bank currency. This also represents one of the key practical cases for central banks exploring tokenized bonds and blockchain financial infrastructure.
Technologically, the Samara project is built on the enterprise-grade blockchain platform Hyperledger Fabric and uses a dedicated Samara system to handle bond business processes. The platform covers bond issuance, investor bidding, coupon payments, redemptions, and secondary market trading, enabling real-time on-chain settlement. The system employs a design where the bond ledger and cash ledger are separated: bonds exist as tokenized assets on the blockchain network, while payments are settled through records in a separate central bank deposit ledger.
To reduce experimental risks, the bond maturity was set to less than three months, and it was only issued to a select group of approved institutional investors. Regulatory agencies such as the Ontario Securities Commission, the Financial Markets Authority, and the Canadian Investment Regulatory Organization participated in approval and oversight of the pilot.
The test results showed that blockchain can significantly enhance transparency and data integrity in the bond market. All transaction records are stored on the distributed ledger in an immutable form, and the real-time settlement mechanism reduces counterparty risk associated with traditional clearing cycles. Additionally, processes that previously required multiple intermediaries can now be completed directly on the blockchain network, improving the efficiency of capital market operations.
However, the Bank of Canada remains cautious about large-scale adoption of tokenized bonds. Regulators have pointed out that before fully integrating blockchain assets into the financial system, issues such as infrastructure integration, system upgrades for market participants, and regulatory framework development need to be addressed. Currently, the Samara project is still in the experimental stage, but this attempt indicates that blockchain technology is gradually integrating into the traditional financial system, and tokenized assets may play a more significant role in future financial markets.