Digital asset bank SGB is positioning its infrastructure as a global intermediary to connect traditional financial systems with emerging digital currencies. By integrating with SWIFT alongside stablecoins, the firm aims to provide an institutional bridge that allows legacy and digital systems to communicate in real time.
Jireh Chua, Chief Development Officer at SGB, explained that the bank addresses a structural gap where traditional banking infrastructure has failed to support digital assets at scale within a regulated framework. This friction is most evident in cross-border activity, where settlement remains fragmented and constrained by systems designed for a different era. To resolve this, the bank launched SGB Net to enable real-time settlement between network participants.
The platform currently processes $2 billion in monthly volume, with transaction numbers growing 50 per cent month-on-month. Chua attributed this throughput to a combination of a full banking licence, global digital onboarding, and direct integration with stablecoin infrastructure. The bank is also integrated with J.P. Morgan’s Wire 365 service to enhance its USD clearing capabilities.
Despite serving over 60 per cent of digital asset businesses, Chua noted that the bank manages sector-specific volatility by diversifying its client base across global payment providers, international trade firms operating between APAC and MENA, and e-commerce entities. “This multi-sector approach is a core component of our risk management strategy,” Chua added, noting that balancing high-growth digital firms with long-term corporate deposits mitigates herding risk.
Regulated by the Central Bank of Bahrain, SGB maintains a neutral clearing corridor by employing industry-standard technologies for transaction monitoring, wallet screening, and blockchain analytics. These tools are designed to prevent money laundering and ensure compliance with global screening standards while the bank facilitates cross-border trade.
The bank’s revenue model moves beyond traditional net interest margins, operating instead as a financial operating system that captures fees through high-volume settlement, FX services, and fiat-stablecoin interoperability. Looking ahead, SGB plans to launch personal banking services including stock trading and wealth products to deepen these revenue streams.
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