Google to launch a neutral L1 for financial institutions

@badbitch · 2025-08-28 22:30 · LeoFinance

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Google is one of those companies that has had significant footprints in the crypto and blockchain ecosystem.

From its parent company's investment arm – Google Ventures (GV) – funding prominent crypto companies including Blockchain.com, Blockaid, Helium, Yuga Labs and more, to Google Cloud being a Polygon network validator and also a super representative on Tron.

And this is just naming a few.

It comes as no surprise that Google would be developing a layer one blockchain. It is even less surprising that the supposed L1 blockchain is advertised as neutral and called a “universal ledger,” meaning that Google aims to unify financial flow through a central layer for various financial institutions.

Google Cloud’s head of Web3 strategy used a LinkedIn post to share new details on the company’s in-development layer-1 blockchain, the Google Cloud Universal Ledger (GCUL).

Rich Widmann described the blockchain as the result of “years of R&D at Google,” designed to be credibly neutral and compatible with Python-based smart contracts.

According to Widmann, GCUL is meant to serve as an open infrastructure layer for financial institutions. “Tether won’t use Circle’s blockchain — and Adyen probably won’t use Stripe’s blockchain,” he said, suggesting that Google’s network-reported neutrality could help broaden adoption.

According to a chart shared by Widmann, while Stripe is leaning on its $1.4 trillion payments network and Circle is centering Arc on USDC, Google Universal Ledger will be a “planet-scale” blockchain with billions of users and bank-grade functionality. – Cointelegraph report

In simple terms, Google is building a L1 to enable TradFi connect and settle.

Think of it as an infrastructure layer for clearing and settlement.

The Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) Group is already mentioned in the report to be working with Google cloud to test tokenized asset settlement and wholesale payment systems.

At the time, CME chairman and CEO Terry Duffy said the Universal Ledger could “deliver significant efficiencies for collateral, margin, settlement and fee payments as the world moves toward 24/7 trading.”

By securing a pilot with CME, which posted record revenue of $1.7 billion in Q2 2025 on average daily volumes of 30.2 million contracts, Google is targeting the core plumbing of global finance.

What does this mean for the crypto ecosystem?

This is simply a case of traditional companies looking to position to profit off the next big thing in tech.

The financial layer is moving on-chain and we're going to see a lot of companies jump in to build services or solutions for profits.

Google's so-called neutral L1 aims to capitalize on the fragmentation that's to be expected when multiple TradFi companies get onboard and launch several L1 and L2 blockchains for various reasons. It can be seen as a bridge network, a sort of interoperability layer.

With that word, “interoperability” mentioned, many crypto-natives can understand what value exists to be captured by Google.

Of course, this is on the speculation that this will be a hot success, I mean, considering Google's position in the tech world, it isn't really hard to believe that pulling in TradFi companies to use GCUL will be easy.

As most things relating to developments involving these category of companies, the notable benefits to crypto is that it could potentially act as a means to onboard TradFi capital. We cannot expect truly decentralized designs or governance, but mere interoperability with the right ecosystems can just be enough to pull capital into DeFi, where it needs to be for the maturity of our industry.

In case you missed it

In my last article, I covered what to expect when numerous businesses launch stablecoins — highlighting what that might mean for consumers.

Thank you for reading!

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