Chainlink has partnered with 24 financial institutions to launch an infrastructure that seeks to improve corporate actions processing.Chainlink has partnered with 24 financial institutions to launch an infrastructure that seeks to improve corporate actions processing.

Chainlink launches blockchain and AI system to cut $58B corporate actions costs

3 min read

Chainlink on Thursday partnered with 24 giant financial institutions to establish an infrastructure to improve corporate actions processing. The firm said the infrastructure will utilize the Chainlink oracle platform, blockchains, and AI to extract, validate, and deliver corporate actions data across blockchains.

Chainlink partnered with firms, including DTCC, Swift, Euroclear, SIX, TMX, CEVALDOM, Grupo BMV, ADDX, Orbit Technology, Marketnode, and Wamid.

The firm also collaborated with top asset managers and banks, including ANZ, UBS, DBS Bank, BNP Paribas’ Securities Services business, Schroders, Wellington Management, Zurcher Kantonalbank, CTBC Bank, Sygnum Bank, Vontobel, AMINA Bank, Zand Bank, and Causeway Capital Management.

Chainlink noted that the global cost of corporate actions processing has surpassed $58 billion annually. The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation reported that informal disclosures, repetitive validation steps, and inconsistent data flows across systems drove the surge in corporate actions processing.

Citi reported that the average cost of handling a single event currently costs $34 million across more than 110,000 firm interactions. The firm also noted that annual processing costs have surged by 10% in 2025.

Chainlink stated that the new infrastructure builds on Phase 1 of its project, where it partnered with Swift, Euroclear, and six financial institutions. The firms managed to demonstrate that corporate actions processing could be reduced significantly. 

The decentralized oracle network revealed that the firms were able to demonstrate that large language models can extract structured data from informal corporate action announcements. They were also able to publish the data on-chain as a unified golden record. 

Chainlink plans to advance the project in Phase 2 into a solution that satisfies the requirements of the current leading financial institution. The firm said Phase 2 demonstrated improved speed, reach, and accessibility of corporate actions data.

Financial institutions leveraged the Chainlink Runtime Environment (CRE) to process, validate, and cross-system distribute corporate actions data using the Chainlink Cross-Chain Interoperability Protocol (CCIP). CRE transformed the validated AI model outputs into an ISO 20022 message format, while CCIP distributed the records to DTCC’s blockchain ecosystem and other blockchains.

Chainlink stated that Phase 2 will focus on solving timing delays, which currently take 24 to 48 hours for corporate action data to reach asset managers from the initial announcement.

The firm also hopes to mitigate the loss of corporate action data, driven by a distortion caused when different intermediaries apply different processing logic. Phase 2 will also aim to prevent data fragmentation, which is caused by the publication of corporate actions in various formats and channels. 

The decentralized oracle network revealed that Phase 2 will introduce a new data attestor role, enabling regulated institutions to confirm the accuracy of corporate action data. The initiative aims to address concerns about authenticity raised by market participants in the previous phase.

Chainlink is working to enable data contributors to provide missing information, which is often excluded from initial disclosures. The firm also plans to support integration with traditional financial infrastructure by generating ISO 20022-compliant messages to ease data delivery.

Mark Garabedian, Director of Digital Assets & Tokenization at Wellington Management, said it’s essential for asset managers to receive accurate corporate actions data quickly and consistently in a standardized format.

Chainlink aims to expand the system’s role in the next phase by extending the current processing workflow to support more complex on-chain corporate actions for equities. The firm plans to enable events such as stock splits to be recorded and attested to across market participants.

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