When Traditional Finance Meets Alternative Blockchains
Anthony Scaramucci, the founder of SkyBridge Capital, is having a bit of a victory lap moment. JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) just issued $50 million in U.S. commercial paper for Galaxy Digital Inc. (GLXY) using Solana (SOL)'s blockchain, and Scaramucci sees it as confirmation that he's been betting on the right horses.
This isn't just some experimental side project. JPMorgan actually issued and is servicing real debt securities on a public blockchain, which is notable because most big banks have historically preferred private, permissioned blockchains where they can control who participates. Using Solana, a public network that anyone can access, represents a meaningful shift in how traditional financial institutions are thinking about blockchain technology.
The Timing Is Interesting
What makes this particularly intriguing is that JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon just said days earlier that the banking giant is open to leveraging blockchain technology to improve services for clients. So this isn't some rogue innovation team acting independently. This appears to be part of a broader strategic direction from the top.
Scaramucci, who's been a vocal cryptocurrency advocate for years, called the development "good news" for his investment thesis around Solana and Avalanche (AVAX). He's not just talking his book either—SkyBridge actually holds a long position in Solana, according to an interview he gave in October.
The Solana-Ethereum Battle
At a conference on Thursday, Scaramucci went further, predicting that Solana would eventually "flip" Ethereum (ETH), meaning it would surpass Ethereum in market capitalization. His reasoning? He argues that Solana is expanding faster across key metrics like developer activity, user growth and throughput capacity.
That's a bold claim considering Ethereum's massive head start and entrenched ecosystem, but institutional adoption like JPMorgan's move certainly adds credibility to the argument that alternative layer-1 blockchains are gaining real traction.
Scaramucci's Broader Blockchain Bets
Scaramucci isn't putting all his eggs in the Solana basket. He's also bullish on Avalanche, which he labeled a "versatile" asset. He serves as a strategic advisor of AgriFORCE Growing Systems Ltd. (AGRI), an AVAX-focused treasury company, giving him both financial and reputational skin in the game.
The broader theme here is tokenization—the idea that traditional financial assets like bonds, stocks and commercial paper can be represented and traded as digital tokens on blockchain networks. It's been one of those "next big things" that people have talked about for years, but we're now seeing major financial institutions actually doing it rather than just experimenting in sandboxes.
Market Response
JPMorgan shares rose 0.14% to $317.84 in after-hours trading on Thursday. The stock had already closed 2.34% higher at $317.38 during the regular trading session. As of this writing, JPM ranked moderately high on momentum and growth metrics, indicating continued investor confidence in the banking giant's strategic direction.
For Scaramucci and other blockchain believers, this is the kind of validation they've been waiting for. When one of the world's largest banks chooses your preferred blockchain to issue real securities, it suggests the technology is moving beyond speculation into actual utility.




