The Bank of Canada has completed Project Samara, issuing 100 million CAD tokenized bonds and testing wholesale digital Canadian dollar settlement, demonstrating the potential for digital infrastructure transformation in the bond market.
Recently, the Bank of Canada announced the completion of a fintech experiment called “Project Samara,” during which it successfully issued a 100 million CAD tokenized bond. This marks Canada’s first bond issuance and settlement using Distributed Ledger Technology (DLT). The bond was issued by Export Development Canada (EDC), with a maturity of less than three months, and was subscribed by a small group of invited investors. The entire process—including bond issuance, bidding, trading, and settlement—was conducted on a distributed ledger platform.
Participants in Project Samara include the Bank of Canada, Royal Bank of Canada (RBC), RBC Dominion Securities, RBC Investor Services Trust, and TD Securities, a subsidiary of Toronto-Dominion Bank. These institutions jointly tested the feasibility of blockchain-based infrastructure in the bond market to assess whether it can improve financial market efficiency.
The Bank of Canada stated that the core goal of this experiment was to explore how digital financial infrastructure impacts traditional bond market operations, and to evaluate the practical application of distributed ledger systems in issuance, trading, and settlement processes.
In the architecture of Project Samara, RBC developed and operates a blockchain-based financial market platform using Hyperledger Fabric technology. The platform supports the full lifecycle management of bonds from issuance to maturity. During the experiment, bonds were issued as tokens on the distributed ledger, allowing participating institutions to submit bids, allocate bonds, and conduct secondary market trading on the same platform. The system also manages interest payments and redemption at maturity.
Another key focus was the settlement mechanism. This experiment did not use commercial bank deposits; instead, settlement was conducted via “wholesale digital Canadian dollars” created by the Bank of Canada.
Digital funds and tokenized bonds flow within the same ledger system, enabling transaction and fund transfer to occur simultaneously. The research team noted that this design could significantly shorten settlement times and reduce counterparty risk. Traditional bond settlement processes often involve multiple financial institutions and intermediaries, taking several days. The distributed ledger system allows for real-time transaction and fund settlement on a single platform.
The findings from Project Samara indicate that distributed ledger technology can improve capital market efficiency, offering potential advantages in data transparency, automated trading processes, and risk management.
Additionally, how distributed ledger platforms collaborate with existing financial infrastructure remains a key issue for future tokenized asset development. Researchers believe that financial markets may gradually adopt hybrid models, connecting traditional systems with blockchain architectures. This experiment demonstrates the technical feasibility of tokenized bonds, but large-scale commercial application will take time to develop.
Canada’s Project Samara also reflects the high level of interest among governments and financial institutions worldwide in asset tokenization. In recent years, several financial centers have launched similar initiatives to incorporate blockchain technology into traditional financial markets.
The Canadian government is also gradually establishing a regulatory framework for digital assets. The 2025 federal budget proposed future legislation related to stablecoins, with the Bank of Canada overseeing the regulatory structure, including reserve assets, redemption mechanisms, and risk management standards. Meanwhile, the Canadian Investment Regulatory Organization (CIRO) recently introduced a custody regulation framework for digital assets, requiring trading platforms to strengthen asset custody standards to reduce risks from hacking, fraud, and platform failures.
Central banks and financial institutions worldwide continue testing blockchain infrastructure, and the tokenized asset market is moving from concept validation toward practical application. The completion of Project Samara is seen as a significant milestone in Canada’s push for digital financial infrastructure.
This article is summarized by Crypto Agent from various sources, reviewed and edited by “Crypto City.” It is still in training, so there may be logical biases or inaccuracies. Content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered investment advice.