Google Cloud to Launch ‘Neutral’ Blockchain for Financial Markets in 2026

2025/08/27 19:54

Google Cloud, the cloud computing division of Alphabet, is reportedly expanding its services into blockchain with the development of its own Layer-1 protocol called the Google Cloud Universal Ledger (GCUL).

According to an announcement made by Rich Widman, Google Cloud’s Web3 Head of Strategy, the system is designed to provide financial institutions with a “performant, credibly neutral” blockchain-based platform that supports tokenized assets, cross-border payment settlements, and Python-based smart contracts.

Google Cloud is Working on GCUL, an L1 for Tokenized Assets, Payment Settlements, and Python Smart Contracts

GCUL, currently running on a private testnet, was described by Google as a service for the financial market that will be accessible through a single API and programmable enough to enable payment automation and digital asset management.

The company also stated that Google Cloud blockchain was designed with regulatory compliance in mind and will operate as a private, permissioned blockchain system.

Reports of Google’s cloud blockchain initiative first surfaced in March after Google Cloud and CME announced plans to trial tokenization and wholesale payments on a distributed ledger. The two companies conducted a pilot for the network, but never labelled it as a layer-1 at the time.

In a LinkedIn post, Windman described GCUL as a “neutral” infrastructure layer and differentiated it from services offered by stablecoin issuer Circle and digital payments services platform Stripe. Currently, Circle is developing its own chain called Arc. That is designed to deepen the mainstream utility for its flagship product, USD Coin (USDC), while Stripe is working on its own Ethereum-compatible blockchain called Tempo that focuses on high-performance payments. Google Cloud’s Web3 infrastructure chief said the company intends GCUL to serve as a common base for financial institutions rather than a vertically integrated product stack.

CME Group has already completed the first phase of integration and testing, calling the L1 technology a step toward low-cost, 24/7 settlement for collateral, margin, and fees. Tests involving market participants are set to begin later this year, with the product slated for launch in 2026.

Critics argue that Google Cloud Universal Ledger cannot be called “Neutral” Since its Operations are Centralized

Google Cloud Universal Ledger reflects the Silicon Valley behemoth’s broader push into the digital assets market. Previously, the company partnered with Coinbase for cloud-based payments, invested in several Web3 startups, and provided the infrastructure for public blockchains such as Flow, Polygon, Tron, Solana, and Arbitrum. With GCUL, Google wants to go from hosting blockchains to developing a protocol from the ground up.

While Windman described GCUL as a Layer-1 network, its permissioned blockchain and private nature has some industry observers questioning whether Google can claim neutrality while operating its own ledger. Critics argued that the company’s upcoming blockchain shouldn’t be described as “decentralized” as it is built and operated by a single entity. However, Windman responded by stating that GCUL protocol is designed in such a way that any financial institution can build on it, highlighting that Tether’s USDT would not use Circle’s Arc blockchain for transactions and payment processors like Adyen would likely stay away from Stripe’s Tempo.

Google’s Web3 head also hinted that Amazon and Microsoft could eventually take part in the GCUL, and the company’s goal in the long run is for outside enterprises to run the chain themselves, allowing them to serve their customers more effectively and efficiently.

Google Sets Sights on $30 Trillion Global Stablecoin Volume

Google’s foray into blockchain technology reflects its efforts to carve out a niche role as a neutral layer in global finance technology, while tokenization of real-world assets is gaining traction. Decentralized ledger technology (DLT) is also attracting major banks, funds, and corporations, adding more urgency to the company’s effort to launch GCUL.

Windman said that more details, including specifications, on the “neutral” system can be expected in the coming months. GCUL comes at a time when the race for on-chain digital payments is heating up, with companies like Ripple, Stripe, and Circle building their own cross-border payments solutions for retail and institutional use cases.

Data shows that stablecoin transaction volumes tripled in 2024 to $30 trillion, far outpacing PayPal’s $1.6 trillion and Visa’s $13 trillion in transactions. Google hopes GCUL can dip its toes in the water by offering lower fees, compliance tools, and instant settlement.

The post Google Cloud to Launch ‘Neutral’ Blockchain for Financial Markets in 2026 appeared first on BiteMyCoin.

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.
Share Insights

You May Also Like

Not XRP, not SHIB: one of these 4 tokens will be the next 50x crypto

Not XRP, not SHIB: one of these 4 tokens will be the next 50x crypto

The crypto market is buzzing again, and the hunt for the next 50x token feels more alive than ever. Ripple’s XRP is around $3.01 with a strong year-over-year rally of more than 436%. Shiba Inu is trading near $0.0000125, still riding its meme coin legacy. Stellar XLM is moving around $0.406 and showing steady development. But one coin is stealing the spotlight, and it is not any of the big names. Little Pepe (LILPEPE) is the meme coin making waves with its presale, peaking higher than PEPE, Dogecoin, and even SHIB in online chatter. LILPEPE is priced at just $0.0020 in stage 11 of its presale, with projections suggesting it could rocket to $0.1 in the months ahead, a massive 50x gain that has investors paying attention.Little Pepe (LILPEPE): The meme coin with real momentumLILPEPE is in stage 11 of its presale, priced at just $0.0020 per token. Early investors from stage 1 have already doubled their money with 100% gains, and even those jumping in at stage 11 can still lock in about 50% profit when the presale listing goes live at $0.0030. After stage 11 sells out, the price moves to $0.0021 in stage 12, climbing toward a 20-stage finish. What makes LILPEPE stand out is the insane demand. Stage 11 is already over 98% filled, with over $21.7 million raised out of the $22.3 million goal and over 13.9 billion tokens sold. The project recently earned a CertiK audit score of 95.49%, reassuring investors that it is not just a meme with no backbone. On top of that, it is now listed on CoinMarketCap, where people can track it in real time. The buzz around LILPEPE is not just digital noise either. Between June and August 2025, it outperformed PEPE, DOGECOIN, and SHIB in ChatGPT 5 search trends, ranking number one in memecoin conversation volume. That is a powerful sign of community attention. Ripple (XRP): Strong growth with regulatory hurdlesRipple’s XRP has had an interesting run. Currently priced around $3.01, XRP has gained more than 436% over the past year after spending much of 2024 stuck under a dollar. Optimism around potential regulatory clarity and even the idea of an ETF has pushed momentum higher. In the short term, though, XRP has slipped roughly 2% to 8% over the past week, showing that volatility is far from over.  Some analysts are pointing to a potential 500% rally if conditions line up, but right now, XRP still feels like a coin waiting for its big legal breakthrough. It has the fundamentals but may not deliver the explosive upside newer tokens promise.Shiba Inu (SHIB): The meme coin that needs fresh fuelShiba Inu is priced at $0.0000125 right now and has dropped about 4.5% over the last week, with a one-month decline of nearly 19%. The token that once turned a small group of investors into millionaires struggles to find fresh momentum. Some projections suggest that SHIB will climb to $0.000033 by 2026, which is a 170% gain, and there are even more ambitious forecasts of 300% growth by 2030. Stellar (XLM): Reliable but slow movingStellar’s XLM is trading around $0.406, down about 8% from last week. Analysts project a modest move to about $0.42 by the end of August, with some long-term forecasts suggesting it could reach as high as $0.75 in 2025.  Other outlooks even see XLM touching $1.16 by 2027, almost a 200% increase from current levels. Why LILPEPE feels like the 50x betHere is the truth: XRP, SHIB, and XLM are all respectable plays. They may each deliver 20x to 30x gains if the stars align. But LILPEPE has the firepower to push toward 50x returns. At $0.0020 today, it only needs to hit $0.1 to deliver that target. With strong presale momentum, community hype, mainstream recognition, and solid infrastructure, that target does not feel far-fetched. LILPEPE offers that feeling of catching the next big rocket before it takes off. If you missed Dogecoin early or are tired of waiting for XRP’s court case to resolve, LILPEPE is the one token that feels alive right now. It is still cheap, still early, and has room to grow. And if those 50x projections come true, this could be the trade that changes everything.For more information about Little Pepe (LILPEPE) visit the links below:Website: https://littlepepe.comWhitepaper: https://littlepepe.com/whitepaper.pdfTelegram: https://t.me/littlepepetokenTwitter/X: https://x.com/littlepepetokenThe post Not XRP, not SHIB: one of these 4 tokens will be the next 50x crypto appeared first on Invezz
Share
Coinstats2025/08/28 01:04
Share