On Tuesday, Franklin Templeton said the updates apply to two existing Rule 2a-7 government money market funds, expanding their usability in regulated digital finance without altering their status as traditional, Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)-registered products. The move targets two fast-developing use cases: stablecoin reserve management and blockchain-based fund distribution.
The first update involves the Western Asset Institutional Treasury Obligations Fund, which has been restructured to align with reserve requirements under the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act. The fund now invests exclusively in U.S. Treasuries with maturities of 93 days or less, positioning it for use by stablecoin issuers operating under the federal framework enacted in July 2025.
Franklin Templeton pointed to the expanding stablecoin market as a driver of demand for regulated, high-quality liquidity products. With stablecoins increasingly used for payments, settlement, and collateral, institutional issuers are seeking compliant reserve assets that behave more like infrastructure than speculation.
The second update centers on the Western Asset Institutional Treasury Reserves Fund, which introduced a Digital Institutional Share Class designed for distribution through blockchain-enabled intermediary platforms. Approved intermediaries can use blockchain technology to record and transfer fund share ownership, enabling faster settlement and around-the-clock transaction capabilities.
Importantly, Franklin Templeton emphasized that the fund itself remains a traditional money market vehicle. The firm explained that the blockchain component affects how shares are distributed and recorded, not the underlying investment strategy or regulatory framework. In short, the plumbing changes, not the product on the shelf.
Matt Jones, head of institutional liquidity at Franklin Templeton, noted that the updates reflect a push to balance innovation with risk management, arguing that early adoption only matters when paired with operational discipline.
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Roger Bayston, the firm’s head of digital assets, framed the move as a response to growing institutional demand for regulated funds that function within digital market infrastructure, rather than an attempt to reinvent money market products themselves.
The announcement adds to Franklin Templeton’s broader digital asset strategy, which has focused on integrating blockchain technology into existing financial products instead of launching crypto-native alternatives. Since 2018, the firm has invested in tokenization research, data science, and blockchain-based fund infrastructure.
As tokenized funds gain traction, the firm’s approach highlights a broader industry theme: institutions appear more interested in making familiar products interoperable with blockchain systems than replacing them outright.
For now, Franklin Templeton’s update reads less like a leap into the unknown and more like a careful retrofit—modern rails added to old engines, with regulators firmly in the driver’s seat.
- What did Franklin Templeton announce?
The firm updated two Western Asset institutional money market funds to support stablecoin reserves and blockchain-based distribution. - Which law does the update align with?
One fund was restructured to meet reserve requirements under the GENIUS Act, the U.S. stablecoin framework enacted in 2025. - Are these funds fully onchain?
No, the funds remain traditional SEC-registered products, with blockchain used for share distribution and recordkeeping. - Who is the target audience?
Institutional investors, stablecoin issuers, and intermediaries seeking regulated liquidity products compatible with digital infrastructure.
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