London Stock Exchange Group Launches New Blockchain-Based Platform for Private Funds in Microsoft Collaboration
London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) has launched a new blockchain-powered platform for private funds.
LSEG, the parent company of the London Stock Exchange, says its new Digital Markets Infrastructure (DMI) will support the full asset lifecycle from “issuance, tokenisation and distribution to post-trade asset settlement and servicing, across multiple asset classes.”
DMI was developed in collaboration with Microsoft and is powered by the tech giant’s cloud computing platform, Azure. The platform has already onboarded clients and facilitated its first transaction.
While DMI will initially focus on private funds, LSEG notes that it plans to expand the platform to other asset classes in the future.
Dr. Darko Hajdukovic, LSEG’s head of digital markets infrastructure, says that DMI is part of an effort to improve processes in private markets.
“At LSEG, we are committed to significantly improving access to private markets by streamlining workflows, enhancing distribution, and enabling liquidity. We intend to do this by continually working with all stakeholders to enhance efficiencies and connectivity for both digitally-native and traditional assets.
The onboarding of our first clients and this first transaction are significant milestones, demonstrating the appetite for an end-to-end, interoperable, regulated financial markets DLT infrastructure. LSEG’s position as a convener of markets can bring significant scale to digital assets and effect real change.”
Generated Image: Midjourney
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Decoding VitaDAO: A Paradigm Revolution in Decentralized Science

Mars Morning News | ETH returns to $3,000, extreme fear sentiment has passed
The Federal Reserve's Beige Book shows little change in U.S. economic activity, with increasing divergence in the consumer market. JPMorgan predicts a Fed rate cut in December. Nasdaq has applied to increase the position limit for BlackRock's Bitcoin ETF options. ETH has returned to $3,000, signaling a recovery in market sentiment. Hyperliquid has sparked controversy due to a token symbol change. Binance faces a $1 billion terrorism-related lawsuit. Securitize has received EU approval to operate a tokenization trading system. The Tether CEO responded to S&P's credit rating downgrade. Large Bitcoin holders are increasing deposits to exchanges. Summary generated by Mars AI. The accuracy and completeness of this summary are still being iteratively improved by the Mars AI model.

The central bank sets a major tone on stablecoins for the first time—where will the market go next?
The People's Bank of China held a meeting to crack down on virtual currency trading and speculation, clearly defining stablecoins as a form of virtual currency with risks of illegal financial activities, and emphasized the continued prohibition of all virtual currency-related businesses.

