Caroline Bishop
Feb 23, 2026 17:59
Chainlink (LINK) Labs targets UK’s capital markets for blockchain-based cross-border payments, citing cost savings of up to 85% versus traditional SWIFT transfers.
Chainlink (LINK) Labs is positioning itself for a major push into the UK’s tokenized financial assets market, with the company’s Global Head of Partnerships Jorge Lesmes describing Britain as entering a “practical phase” in blockchain-based payment infrastructure.
The timing matters. Cross-border payments represent roughly $1 trillion in annual transaction volume globally, and traditional systems remain frustratingly inefficient. SWIFT transfers typically cost around 6.5% in fees and can take days to settle through chains of correspondent banks. Blockchain alternatives? They’re running between 0.5% and 1.5%—an 85% cost reduction that’s catching institutional attention.
Why the UK Makes Sense
Lesmes pointed to three factors making Britain attractive: deep capital markets, a heavyweight asset management industry, and existing financial infrastructure that’s already globally connected. The country has historically served as a bridge between American and European finance, which positions it well for cross-border innovation.
The broader market is moving quickly. Deutsche Bank announced a partnership with Ripple on February 20 to enhance its cross-border settlement capabilities—a signal that traditional finance isn’t waiting around. XRP spot ETFs have also seen significant inflows this week, suggesting retail and institutional appetite for payment-focused blockchain assets remains strong.
The Technical Case
Blockchain’s advantage in payments comes down to settlement mechanics. Traditional correspondent banking involves multiple intermediaries, each adding time and cost. A distributed ledger settles transactions directly between parties, operating around the clock rather than during banking hours.
Smart contracts add another layer—automating compliance checks and currency conversions that currently require manual processing. Industry projections suggest stablecoins could capture 20% of global cross-border payments by 2030, though regulatory frameworks remain inconsistent across jurisdictions.
What’s Still Missing
Challenges persist. Regulatory harmonization between countries remains patchy, and questions about system robustness during high-volume periods haven’t been fully answered. Interoperability between different blockchain networks is another friction point that companies like Chainlink are specifically trying to solve through their oracle infrastructure.
For now, the UK push represents Chainlink Labs’ bet that institutional adoption will accelerate through traditional finance hubs rather than crypto-native channels. Whether Britain’s regulators move fast enough to capture that opportunity remains the open question heading into 2026.
Image source: Shutterstock