Goldman and PayPal Play it Safe

Plus Bergen County deeds go on-chain

Hello, Real World!

Last week should have been a victory lap for on-chain finance. U.S. regulators finally blessed bank-grade stablecoins, and the market for tokenized RWAs has blown past $25B. Yet when two brand-name incumbents stepped up, both ducked the open rails that make all that growth possible. Goldman Sachs rolled out money-market-fund shares as tokens and then locked them inside its own private ledger. PayPal announced a “global” wallet network and then left its federally approved dollar stablecoin on the sidelines.

Today’s feature breaks down what each launch actually does, why the tech is clever but the strategy is timid, and how truly public tokens like BlackRock’s BUIDL might eat the lunch Goldman and PayPal.

On a brighter note, Bergen County, New Jersey, quietly committed every property deed it oversees to Avalanche, pushing a three-century-old registry onto a public chain. And down in Latin America, $130M in agribusiness receivables were issued on XRPL.

Let’s dive into it.

Chris (@storaker)

Top Moves of the Week

Goldman Sachs × BNY Mellon — Institutions can now subscribe to several large money-market funds as “mirror” tokens that settle on Goldman’s permissioned GS DAP chain while BNY’s LiquidityDirect keeps the books. The market they’re tapping holds roughly $7.07 T in assets, according to the Investment Company Institute.

PayPal World — The hub links India’s UPI, Brazil’s Mercado Pago, China’s Tenpay Global, Venmo, and PayPal itself. Nearly two billion users will see local balances when they shop abroad. The global payments network rhymes with crypto but curiously, the press release never mentions PYUSD.

Bergen County × Avalanche — A five-year deal will move 370,000 property deeds ($240B in real estate) onto Avalanche, creating the largest deed-tokenisation project in US history.

Goldman Locks the Gate, PayPal Drops the Coin—Playing It Safe is Playing not to Win

On Wednesday, Goldman announced that clients will soon be able to subscribe to and redeem shares of several large U.S. money-market funds from Fidelity, BlackRock and others, as on-chain “mirror tokens.” 

The tokens live on Goldman’s Digital Asset Platform (GS DAP), while custody and record-keeping stay inside BNY Mellon’s LiquidityDirect (LD, the cash-management portal that already handles $465B of institutional balances every day). 

GS DAP uses Daml smart-contracts on the Canton Network, a permissioned ledger that lets only whitelisted nodes sync positions with sub-second finality and hardware-backed privacy. How it works:

  1. Subscription (2 seconds): Trader books an MMF order in BNY Mellon LD. LD’s Daml adaptor pings GS DAP’s Global Synchronizer. GS DAP mints a “mirror token” 1-for-1 against BNY’s transfer-agent register.

  2. Collateralisation (in seconds): Within Goldman’s private network, traders can use the tokens as collateral for loans with Goldman’s repo desk or transfer them to a central clearing house to back cleared trades.

  3. End-of-Day (in batch): At the end of each day, Goldman erases the temporary tokens it created, BNY Mellon recalculates the fund’s share price, and they double-check that the token count still matches the official shareholder list.

Stacking up

The pitch is simple: settlement shrinks from T+1 to seconds and the tokens can be pledged as repo collateral before the New York close. For instance, a $200M subscription once trapped a full day of VaR; now it settles before the market closes. In other words, it’s an efficiency upgrade for the $7T money-fund market—so long as you’re inside Goldman’s gated network.

Dimension

GS DAP mirrors

BlackRock BUIDL 

Franklin BENJI

Public-chain reach

none

Ethereum L1, Polygon, Base

Stellar, Ethereum, Arbitrum, Base, Polygon, Avalanche, Aptos, VeChain

Secondary venues

none

Crypto․com, Deribit (+2 DEX pilots)

Galaxy on-ramp, VeChain enterprise rails

AUM

<$100M (pilot) 

$2.4B

$780M

Smart-contract composability

none

ERC-20; on-chain collateral engines

ERC-20 & Stellar SCA; on-chain TA

Because Goldman’s mirror-tokens never leave its private ledger, a desk that wants to post them as collateral outside of it must negotiate a fresh, one-off credit-support annex with each counter-party. Under the SA-CCR capital rules, that bilateral deal is treated almost the same as an unsecured exposure, so the trader still has to hold extra capital.

BUIDL works differently. The token lives on Ethereum, so a desk can move it straight into an on-chain margin vault (for example, the smart-contract collateral engines now running on Deribit and Crypto․com). Those vaults enforce margin calls in real time, letting the exposure net out inside the contract itself. That means the trader no longer needs to reserve a matching slice of balance sheet. In short: Goldman shortens settlement but leaves the capital bill mostly intact, while BUIDL’s open design can actually lower that bill from day one.

Missing in action: PYUSD

PayPal lifted the curtain on PayPal World, a new rails layer that will let nearly two billion users of India’s UPI, Brazil’s Mercado Pago, China’s Tenpay Global, Venmo and PayPal itself shop and remit across borders without touching card networks.  A UPI shopper in Delhi will see the charge in rupees; a São Paulo merchant will receive reais in Mercado Pago. PayPal says Phase 1 goes live later this year and calls it “the first truly global wallet network.” 

Notably absent from the technical spec: PYUSD, PayPal’s fully backed dollar stablecoin. Transfers will still clear through correspondent banks, Nostro accounts and FX netting, at least until PayPal decides to plug its own token into the system.

Settlement still hops through Nostro ladders, daylight caps, weekend freezes. PYUSD could collapse that to 24/7 dollar clearing, plus on-chain FX. Management says token support will come “over time”. Until then, PayPal World carries the same intraday liquidity charges PYUSD was designed to erase.

A leadership gap

On July 16 José Fernández da Ponte, architect of PYUSD and PayPal’s blockchain chief — left to to join the Stellar Development Foundation. Only eight days later, PayPal World debuted without stablecoins, suggesting the roadmap lost its champion at a critical juncture.

2018 Thinking in a 2025 Market

Goldman’s decision to tokenize on a private chain is like building a high-speed train that only runs between two buildings on Wall Street. Meanwhile, the rest of the industry is building subways, highways, and airports on open rails, where assets, protocols, and users can freely move and interconnect.”

When Goldman first tested private chains in 2018, Ethereum could process <15 TPS; qualified custodians were scarce; the SEC was still suing everyone. Today:

Emerging regulatory clarity: The GENIUS Act, Clarity and other legislation, plus the end of Gensler’s “regulate by enforcement” era.

Infrastructure maturity: Layer-2s handle thousands of TPS with predictable fees.

Market traction: Public RWAs top $25B and rising 2-3% monthly.

Composability in the wild: BUIDL collateral on Crypto․com + Deribit lets traders earn Treasury yield while trading perpetuals.

Yet Goldman and PayPal still choose closed loops. A faster spreadsheet is still a spreadsheet, and a global wallet network without its own dollar token is just old pipes in new paint. Incumbents harvest some operational fruit today, but they’re leaving entire value drivers — composability, programmability, perpetual liquidity — open to more decisive competitors.

Until the walls come down, “playing it safe” looks a lot like playing not to win.

Bergen County, NJ to digitize 370,000 property deeds worth $240B on Avalanche

Bergen County meets crypto

Bergen County recorded its first deed in 1715. Three centuries later, title abstractors still re-key names from scanned PDFs. The county’s new partnership with Balcony aims to end that loop. Over the next five years, every deed, lien, and mortgage release will be hashed and written to the Avalanche C-Chain.

Officials claim title review times can drop “from days to minutes” once the new workflow is live, and closings could routinely finish within 24 hours. Each on-chain deed anchors back to a signed PDF stored on IPFS. Lenders, investors, and insurers can verify ownership without waiting for a clerk. Home-buyers may see smaller title-insurance premiums because underwriters gain real-time chain-of-title proofs.

Avalanche benefits, too. Adding low-frequency, high-value land records creates stickier demand for validators than memecoins will ever do.

California’s DMV provided the first US public-sector case study last year when it digitized 42M vehicle titles also on Avalanche. Bergen expands the template to real estate, the most litigated asset class in the United States.

Tokenizing a land registry is not about yield farming; it is about making a civic system of record tamper-evident and machine-readable. Homeowners need not learn the term “blockchain,” yet their closings—and closing costs—will change because a county clerk adopted one.

Other Stories Worth Your Time

WisdomTree’s USDW (stablecoin) + WTGXX (yield-bearing) — The Nasdaq-listed asset manager rebranded its Stellar-native WUSD to USDW and paired it with an on-chain money-market fund. WTGXX has ballooned from $12M in January to $482M today (RWA.xyz). Corporate treasurers are the initial target.

Citadel asks SEC to tread cautiously on tokenization   — In a comment letter the market-maker urged the SEC not to water down disclosure standards for tokenized equities, warning that “partial exemptions” could drain liquidity from national exchanges into opaque venues.

VERT’s Agribusiness receivables on XRPL — Brazilian securitizer VERT issued a R$700 M (≈ $130 M) agribusiness receivable certificate on the XRP Ledger, kicking off a pipeline it believes could reach half a billion dollars out of Latin America’s $200B-plus agribusiness market.

Circle’s yield-bearing USYC on BNB Chain and Binance — The issuer’s yield-bearing token will be natively issued on BNB Chain and is immediately accepted as off-exchange collateral by Binance for institutional clients.

U.S. Senate Banking Committee released a draft crypto-market-structure — The bill complements the House-passed CLARITY Act and clarifies jurisdiction between SEC vs. CFTC, regulates intermediaries, and focuses on compliance issues.

SolCard Shuts Door on Anonymous Visa Use — Some unverified SolCard users lost access to their virtual debit cards, but a company representative says a no-KYC option will be reinstated.

That wraps this week’s issue of Real World. You know the drill — like, subscribe and please share this with anyone who still believes in “blockchain, not crypto”.

Tips, corrections, rants? Let me know, or contact the editors at [email protected].

See you next week—until then, keep it real.
Chris Storaker