Progmat is the megabank-led tokenisation consortium that has produced most of the trust-route output under Japan's PSA stablecoin regime, and it is the operational backbone that the FSA Japan points to when it wants to demonstrate that the Japanese trust-issuance route is shipping rather than theoretical. The consortium structure is MUFG-led, with Mizuho, SMBC, and a wider participant set extending into custodians, asset managers, and technology partners. The asset-class scope spans regulated stablecoins (under the trust route), tokenised security tokens for real-estate beneficial interests (Progmat ST), and adjacent tokenised-asset products. For a tokenisation product team integrating with Japanese flows, Progmat is the closest thing to a default counterparty: not the only consortium, but the one with the most legally-clean trust-route plumbing in production.
Consortium structure
Progmat sits inside the constellation of MUFG-affiliated entities, with operational leadership rooted in MUFG and the consortium extending to the other Japanese megabanks (Mizuho, SMBC) and a broader participant base of trust banks, custodians, and technology partners. The consortium is a working participant set rather than a single legal entity issuing every product: each issuance involves a trust company holding the reserve, a participant bank or asset manager originating the underlying asset or cash, and the technology platform handling the token issuance and lifecycle. As of late 2025 the public-facing brand sits with Progmat as the platform identity, with the participant banks named on individual product launches.
The consortium structure matters for two reasons that operators sometimes miss. First, the megabank participation is operational rather than symbolic. Mizuho and SMBC are not on a press-release logo wall. They are running primary distribution through their own customer bases, holding reserves at their trust subsidiaries in some product configurations, and contributing balance-sheet support to consortium-level liquidity. Second, the consortium produces a layer of governance that no single bank's tokenisation programme would, because product launches require multi-party sign-off across participants with different supervisory exposures. That slows the cadence of new product launches but produces output that is easier to defend in front of the FSA Japan than a single bank's solo programme would be.
The trust-route mechanics
The trust-issuance route under the PSA stablecoin amendments works as follows. A trust company (typically a trust bank, supervised by the FSA Japan) accepts cash or cash equivalents into a trust under a trust agreement, holds those reserves as trust property, and issues beneficial interests in the trust as the on-chain instrument. The on-chain token is the beneficiary's right to a defined share of the trust property. The trust property is bankruptcy-remote from the trust company under Japanese trust law, which means that if the trust company itself fails, the trust property is segregated from the trust company's general estate.
What the holder of a Progmat-issued token is therefore exposed to is the underlying reserve assets and the operational competence of the trust company in administering the trust. They are not exposed to the trust company's own corporate credit risk in the same direct way they would be exposed to a bank's credit risk if they held a bank-direct stablecoin. This is the structural feature that has made the trust route the preferred path for Japanese megabank consortia: the resulting instrument is collateralised by trust property, supervised by the FSA, and the participants' balance sheets are not directly liable in the same way they would be under a bank-direct issuance.
Reserve composition rules under the trust route are specified in the trust agreement and disclosed to beneficiaries on the cadence the agreement requires. As of late 2025, public information on Progmat reserve disclosure cadence varies by product line. Operators integrating Progmat-format flows into a treasury workflow should treat reserve cadence as a per-product question rather than a consortium-wide constant.
Underlying ledger choice
The Progmat platform has historically used a permissioned-ledger architecture chosen for compatibility with Japanese trust-administration requirements, including beneficiary-tracking and permissioned-transfer logic at the token-contract level. The specific ledger and the Canton-Network-or-other architectural choice has not been the focus of consortium press output the way Canton has been for the Nomura-Mizuho-JSCC tokenised JGB collateral trial. The two are not the same project. Progmat's stablecoin and tokenised-asset products predate the April 2026 Canton trial by years, and use a different stack.
The rationale for a permissioned ledger over a public-chain deployment is the same one most institutional Japanese consortia have reached for: bank-grade privacy at the application-domain level, KYC/AML compatibility, integration with the existing custodian and trust infrastructure, and predictable governance over network parameters. Public-chain deployment of a trust-route product is structurally awkward in any case, because the beneficiary-tracking requirements of Japanese trust law require permissioned transfer that public-chain bearer-style logic does not natively support.
Asset-class scope
Progmat's footprint spans more than stablecoins. The platform is the technology backbone for trust-route stablecoin issuance, but it has also been the substrate for security-token products in Japan, most notably tokenised real-estate beneficial interests under the brand "Progmat ST" (security tokens). These are structurally different from the stablecoin products: the security tokens represent beneficial interests in real-estate trust structures rather than cash-equivalent claims, and the regulatory perimeter shifts from the PSA stablecoin amendments to the FIEA and the security-token regime.
Stretching across both stablecoins and security tokens inside the same platform is part of what makes Progmat institutionally important to the FSA Japan's broader tokenisation strategy. The FSA can point to a single platform supervised by familiar trust-and-securities supervision pathways, producing both regulated stablecoins and regulated security tokens, and use that as evidence that Japanese tokenisation is shipping under existing legal infrastructure rather than requiring new bespoke regimes. That posture differs from Hong Kong's, where the HKMA and SFC HK split the wholesale and investor-facing layers across separate frameworks.
Interoperability with other Japanese platforms
Progmat is not the only tokenisation platform operating in Japan. The Japanese ecosystem has multiple platform vendors and consortia, including Securitize Japan (the Japan-localised arm of Securitize) and various independent tokenisation operators with their own bank partnerships. Cross-platform interoperability remains a live operational question. As of late 2025, public information on direct Progmat interoperability with other Japanese tokenisation platforms is limited, and operators integrating multi-platform Japanese flows should treat each platform as its own integration target rather than assume routing across them.
The April 2026 Canton tokenised JGB collateral trial sits adjacent to but separate from Progmat. The trial uses the Canton Network as its substrate, with Digital Asset as the technology partner. Whether the cash leg of that trial uses Progmat trust-issued stablecoins or a different settlement asset is one of the open questions noted on the japan page and the JSCC page; the announcement does not specify. The two could plausibly converge over time if the Canton trial scales and needs a regulated yen cash-leg instrument, or they could remain on parallel tracks with separate tokenised-collateral and tokenised-stablecoin programmes.
Role in the FSA's broader strategy
The FSA Japan's tokenisation strategy as of late 2025 has been to channel innovation through the Payment Innovation Project (PIP) sandbox, the Financial System Council, and the existing trust-and-securities supervisory pathways rather than publish standalone tokenisation frameworks the way the HKMA has with Project Ensemble. Progmat fits that posture neatly: it ships under existing trust law, under existing FIEA security-token rules, and under the PSA stablecoin amendments, with no bespoke tokenisation legislation required.
Progmat is also one of the operational reference points for FSA-side international engagement. When the FSA hosts a foreign supervisor or international standard-setter, the trust-route stablecoin output and Progmat ST tokenised real-estate output are the worked examples of "Japan is shipping". The April 2026 Hernández de Cos visit to Tokyo and the BoJ seminar speech "Stablecoins: framing the debate" sit in that context: BIS-side engagement on stablecoin design at a venue where the host has a working trust-route example to point to.
Cross-border posture
Cross-border use of Progmat-format trust-issued stablecoins is structurally constrained by the beneficiary-tracking requirements of Japanese trust law and the permissioned-transfer logic at the token-contract level. A non-Japanese counterparty wallet receiving a Progmat-format token needs to be inside the permissioned set, which means KYC at consortium level. The instrument is therefore closer to a tokenised fund interest in its cross-border usability than to a payment stablecoin. For tokenisation flows running across the Asian wholesale corridor, Progmat-format products are most naturally usable inside Japan and inside permissioned cross-border consortia, less naturally usable as a free-floating settlement asset.
The mBridge cross-border post-graduation governance, BIS Innovation Hub work, and Project Agorá all sit at a layer above Progmat in the architecture. Progmat is not currently a named participant in the public-facing cross-border tokenisation pilots that involve the Bank of Japan or its peers. Whether Progmat-format stablecoins become eligible cash-leg instruments in cross-border tokenised settlement experiments is one of the open structural questions for the next phase.
Open questions
- Aggregate volume and outstanding-issuance figures across Progmat product lines are not reliably surfaced in the public record as of late 2025. Operators sizing exposure should request product-level disclosures from the consortium directly rather than rely on press output.
- Specific reserve composition and disclosure cadence per Progmat product is not consortium-uniform.
- Whether Progmat trust-issued stablecoins are eligible cash-leg instruments in the Nomura-Mizuho-JSCC tokenised JGB collateral trial on Canton.
- Direct interoperability between Progmat and other Japanese tokenisation platforms (Securitize Japan and others) at the protocol level.
- Whether the consortium will publish a single platform-level reserve-composition feed across product lines, or continue per-product disclosure.
Related
- japan.
- FSA Japan.
- Mizuho, Nomura for megabank context.
- japan psa stablecoin routes for the three-route taxonomy.
- japan jpyc ftsp route for the FTSP route.
- Stablecoin types for the cross-jurisdictional stablecoin taxonomy.
- Canton Network, Digital Asset for the adjacent April 2026 Canton trial.
- JSCC for the CCP context.