HSBC has secured approval from the Bank of England to operate inside the UK’s Digital Securities Sandbox (DSS), making it the first company cleared by the central bank to go live in the programme. The bank’s digital assets platform, HSBC Orion, will function as a digital securities depository within the sandbox environment.
What HSBC Orion will do inside the DSS
HSBC announced on Tuesday that HSBC Orion will support the issuance, servicing, and settlement of digital securities under the sandbox framework. The platform is designed to handle digitally native bond issuance, covering both corporate bonds and the UK government’s planned digital sovereign bond, known as the Digital Gilt Instrument (DIGIT).
The bank said HSBC Orion has already facilitated more than $5 billion in digital bond issuances globally.
DIGIT timeline and London Stock Exchange tie-up
HM Treasury confirmed on Thursday that the first DIGIT transaction is expected to take place by the first quarter of 2027. Alongside that update, Treasury noted that HSBC and London Stock Exchange Group signed a memorandum of understanding aimed at developing connectivity to support investor access to the pilot issuance.
About the Digital Securities Sandbox
The DSS was launched in 2024 and is jointly operated by the Bank of England and the Financial Conduct Authority. Its purpose is to test distributed ledger technology for the issuance, trading, and settlement of securities inside a live regulatory environment.
The approval marks a first-mover position rather than a finished product. The DSS remains a testing regime, the flagship DIGIT transaction is not expected until early 2027, and the HSBC-LSEG arrangement is at the memorandum-of-understanding stage. What HSBC has secured is the clearance to begin, ahead of any live sovereign issuance.


