Canada has successfully piloted a C$100 million tokenized bond settled using a wholesale central bank digital currency as part of the Bank of Canada’s Project Samara.
Key Takeaways
- The Bank of Canada tested a C$100 million tokenized bond issuance using blockchain technology.
- The bond was issued by Export Development Canada and settled using a wholesale central bank digital currency token called W-CAD.
- The pilot ran on the Samara distributed ledger platform built with Hyperledger Fabric.
- The experiment found efficiency gains and improved data integrity, but also highlighted regulatory and infrastructure challenges.
What Happened?
The Bank of Canada has completed a pilot project called Project Samara, testing whether blockchain technology and tokenization can improve the way government style bonds are issued and settled. As part of the experiment, Export Development Canada issued a C$100 million bond that was fully processed on a distributed ledger system.
The bond had a maturity of less than three months and was sold to a closed group of investors through RBC Capital Markets and TD Securities. The entire lifecycle of the bond, including issuance, trading, and settlement, took place on a blockchain based platform.
LATEST: 🇨🇦 The Bank of Canada has completed its Project Samara tokenization pilot, which tested issuing a $100 million CAD bond issuance using Hyperledger Fabric. pic.twitter.com/rTV0iQ7ML4
— CoinMarketCap (@CoinMarketCap) March 6, 2026
Canada Experiments With Tokenized Bond Infrastructure
The bond was issued and settled on a purpose built distributed ledger platform called Samara. The system was developed using Hyperledger Fabric, an enterprise blockchain framework designed for financial and institutional use.
Samara handled the complete bond lifecycle, including:
- Bond issuance and investor bidding
- Coupon payment management
- Redemption processing
- Secondary market trading
Settlement occurred using a wholesale Canadian dollar token called W-CAD, minted by the Bank of Canada. The system used atomic settlement, meaning the transfer of the digital bond and the payment token occurred at the same time. This approach reduces settlement delays and lowers counterparty risk between participants.
According to Export Development Canada, the pilot marks Canada’s first tokenized bond settled directly in central bank money. The agency described the issuance as an important step toward understanding how tokenization and distributed ledger technology could improve financial market infrastructure.
Efficiency Gains but Challenges Remain
The results of Project Samara showed several potential benefits for capital markets.
The Bank of Canada reported that the system delivered improvements in:
- Operational efficiency
- Data integrity and transparency
- Reduced counterparty and settlement risks
However, the pilot also revealed practical challenges. The report noted that some advantages were partially offset by increased system complexity, liquidity costs, and gaps in the current regulatory framework.
In an official statement, Bank of Canada Executive Director Ron Morrow said:
Despite demonstrating that the technology works, the Bank of Canada cautioned that broad adoption may take time. The announcement noted that integration challenges and limited appetite for major changes to financial infrastructure could slow implementation.
Built on Nearly a Decade of CBDC Research
Project Samara builds on the Bank of Canada’s earlier Project Jasper, launched in 2016 with Payments Canada and private sector partners. That initiative explored the use of distributed ledger technology for wholesale interbank payments and securities settlement.
While Project Jasper was considered one of the early experiments in blockchain-based financial infrastructure, the latest pilot reflects how central banks are continuing to explore tokenized financial assets and wholesale CBDCs.
The Canadian government is also preparing broader regulatory frameworks related to digital finance. Canada’s 2025 federal budget included plans to introduce new regulations for fiat backed stablecoins, signaling growing policy attention to digital asset infrastructure.
Unlike the U.S. Federal Reserve system, the Bank of Canada is fully owned by the Canadian federal government, which may allow the country to coordinate policy decisions related to digital finance more directly.
CoinLaw’s Takeaway
In my experience covering blockchain experiments by central banks, most projects remain theoretical or limited to simulations. What makes this pilot interesting is that Canada actually executed a live bond issuance with real participants and settlement in central bank money.
I believe this is a meaningful step for tokenized finance. It shows that government backed institutions are willing to test blockchain infrastructure in real capital markets, not just in lab environments. At the same time, the Bank of Canada’s caution about regulatory gaps and infrastructure changes highlights an important reality. Transforming financial markets is much harder than proving the technology works.
If more pilots like this succeed, tokenized bonds and CBDC based settlement could eventually become a normal part of institutional finance.