Binance and asset manager Franklin Templeton have launched their first joint product aimed at institutional investors, according to a Wednesday announcement.
The new offering, which the two firms have been developing since September 2025, establishes an off-exchange collateral framework allowing institutional traders to use tokenized money market fund shares issued through Franklin Templeton’s Benji platform as trading collateral on Binance.
Under the model, clients can keep assets in regulated custody while generating yield and maintaining trading access, said Roger Bayston, who leads Digital Assets at Franklin Templeton, in a statement.
“That’s the future Benji was designed for, and working with partners like Binance allows us to deliver it at scale,” Bayston stated.
Custody and settlement are handled by Ceffu, Binance’s institutional custody arm, allowing assets to remain off-exchange in third-party custody while their value is reflected within Binance’s trading system.
According to Ceffu CEO Ian Loh, the program responds to an increasing institutional appetite for trading models that balance robust risk controls with efficient capital deployment.
The structure is designed to lower counterparty exposure and improve capital efficiency for institutional participants seeking yield-bearing collateral in crypto markets.
“Partnering with Franklin Templeton to offer tokenized real-world assets for off-exchange collateral settlement is a natural next step in our mission to bring digital assets and traditional finance closer together,” Catherine Chen, Head of VIP & Institutional at Binance, noted.
Franklin’s tokenized treasury fund, the Franklin OnChain U.S. Government Money Fund (FOBXX), is currently the fourth-largest tokenized treasury fund globally, with around $896 million in total assets, according to data from RWA.xyz.



