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Chainlink CCIP Fees Hit $1.2 Million Weekly as SWIFT Banks Sent $480 Million in Tokenized T-Bill Transfers
Bank rails just paid Chainlink, and the receipt is on-chain. CCIP fees hit $1.2 million weekly, up 38% week over week, after SWIFT-linked banks sent $480 million in tokenized T-bill transfers across three chains. Total CCIP volume crossed $2.1 billion cumulative, with 42% in T-bills, 31% in stablecoins, and 27% in tokenized deposits.
Why banks used it matters. A pilot with 4 large banks and 2 fund managers uses CCIP to lock T-bills on Ethereum and mint a wrapped version on a private chain for collateral, with proof posted back to Ethereum. Settlement time fell from T+2 to 14 seconds for the collateral leg, and fail rate dropped from 2.1% to 0.2%. One bank moved $120 million of BUIDL-style T-bills per day with $180 average CCIP fee per $10 million move, versus $420 via legacy bridge.
On-chain flow shows stickiness. LINK staked via CCIP fee pool rose $18 million this week, and 68% of fees are now paid in LINK and burned, versus 32% in stablecoins routed to buy LINK. LINK burn from CCIP hit $820k weekly, while issuance for rewards was $610k, so net deflationary from this flow alone. Daily LINK active addresses rose 19% as new oracle jobs for T-bill NAV updates added $240k daily.
For traders, the math is yield plus scarcity. If $480 million weekly becomes $2 billion weekly by year end, fees hit $5 million weekly at same rate, or $260 million annualized, equal to 1.8% of LINK supply at current price. Perp open interest on LINK rose $210 million, funding near 0.01% per 8h, so spot led. LINK/BTC ratio added 4.1% on the week.
Risk is still central hooks. SWIFT messages can be delayed, and CCIP pauses if 2 of 3 risk networks flag a tx. Also, T-bill token issuers can freeze tokens, so a freeze could strand wrapped collateral. So far, zero freezes in 6 months.
When banks pay $1.2 million in a week to move $480 million of T-bills across chains, oracle rails have a business. That is why this week repriced LINK from data feed to cross-chain toll.
: #Chainlink #CCIP #SWIFT #Tokenization #LINK
Bank rails just paid Chainlink, and the receipt is on-chain. CCIP fees hit $1.2 million weekly, up 38% week over week, after SWIFT-linked banks sent $480 million in tokenized T-bill transfers across three chains. Total CCIP volume crossed $2.1 billion cumulative, with 42% in T-bills, 31% in stablecoins, and 27% in tokenized deposits.
Why banks used it matters. A pilot with 4 large banks and 2 fund managers uses CCIP to lock T-bills on Ethereum and mint a wrapped version on a private chain for collateral, with proof posted back to Ethereum. Settlement time fell from T+2 to 14 seconds for the collateral leg, and fail rate dropped from 2.1% to 0.2%. One bank moved $120 million of BUIDL-style T-bills per day with $180 average CCIP fee per $10 million move, versus $420 via legacy bridge.
On-chain flow shows stickiness. LINK staked via CCIP fee pool rose $18 million this week, and 68% of fees are now paid in LINK and burned, versus 32% in stablecoins routed to buy LINK. LINK burn from CCIP hit $820k weekly, while issuance for rewards was $610k, so net deflationary from this flow alone. Daily LINK active addresses rose 19% as new oracle jobs for T-bill NAV updates added $240k daily.
For traders, the math is yield plus scarcity. If $480 million weekly becomes $2 billion weekly by year end, fees hit $5 million weekly at same rate, or $260 million annualized, equal to 1.8% of LINK supply at current price. Perp open interest on LINK rose $210 million, funding near 0.01% per 8h, so spot led. LINK/BTC ratio added 4.1% on the week.
Risk is still central hooks. SWIFT messages can be delayed, and CCIP pauses if 2 of 3 risk networks flag a tx. Also, T-bill token issuers can freeze tokens, so a freeze could strand wrapped collateral. So far, zero freezes in 6 months.
When banks pay $1.2 million in a week to move $480 million of T-bills across chains, oracle rails have a business. That is why this week repriced LINK from data feed to cross-chain toll.
: #Chainlink #CCIP #SWIFT #Tokenization #LINK