Japan’s banking giant is hedging its bets — a new subsidiary to play in Web3 without risking the mothership.
Sony Bank just minted BlockBloom Inc., a Web3-native spin-off with $2M in starting capital. The logic?
Analysts say this is straight from the institutional playbook: separate the risky growth lab from the conservative cash cow.
Japan has been quietly building crypto-friendly rails:
BlockBloom fits neatly into this landscape. With Sony’s brand weight, it could quickly become a trusted node for NFT custody, tokenized bonds, and smart-contract-driven finance.
Near-term, BlockBloom is a rounding error on Sony Bank’s earnings. Long-term, it’s a Trojan horse:
As one Tokyo fintech analyst put it:
“It’s a compliance shield and a growth option in one. If tokenized finance scales, Sony won’t be left behind.”
Sony Bank’s move mirrors a broader shift: mainstream finance cautiously entering Web3 via spin-offs and subsidiaries.
Why this matters globally:
BlockBloom = Sony’s option bet on a tokenized future.
Title: Sony Bank Launches BlockBloom, $2M Web3 Subsidiary for NFTs and Tokenized Assets Meta Description: Sony Bank spins off BlockBloom Inc., a Web3 subsidiary with $2M in capital to explore NFTs, tokenized securities, and blockchain services in Japan’s regulated digital asset market. Slug: sony-bank-blockbloom-web3-subsidiary-nfts Tags: Sony Bank, BlockBloom, Web3, NFTs, tokenized securities, blockchain Japan, digital assets, fintech regulation Alt Text: Sony Bank launches Web3 subsidiary BlockBloom to explore NFTs, tokenized assets, and blockchain infrastructure in Japan
Хочешь, я добавлю к этой статье ещё сравнительную вставку: как Sony Bank теперь конкурирует с другими японскими банками (Mizuho, MUFG) в токенизации? Это может усилить контекст.
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