European fintech company Spiko, on July 1, 2025, revealed its adoption of Chainlink’s cross-chain interoperability protocol (CCIP). With this integration, Spiko’s funds achieve a new level of interoperability. It further opens access to two new assets, collateralized by euro and U.S. dollar-denominated treasury bills. These assets are the first EU money market funds registered in the EU for USD and EUR denominations. They include equity issued as fungible tokens on a public blockchain. Spiko is currently steering more than $380 million in regulated, on-chain funds. To fulfill their regulatory and operational burdens, they are adopting Chainlink for critical compliance checks such as know your customer (KYC) and anti-money laundering (AML).

Spiko is using Chainlink’s CCIP to allow multichain access to its funds. These money market funds, authorized by France’s markets regulator AMF, are being crafted as institutional-grade on-chain funds.

The recently launched integration with Chainlink is meant to help automate operations and improve compliance. Spiko aims to extend its tokenized money market funds across multiple chains while adhering to the compliance and operational standards required by institutional investors.

By integrating CCIP, we’re extending our tokenized money market funds across chains while maintaining the compliance and operational standards required by institutional investors. - Paul-Adrien Hyppolite, Spiko's co-founder and chief executive officer

Chainlink’s CCIP will drive Spiko’s regulated money market funds, correcting historic restraints on transferring shares across networks. Before, investors needed to redeem on one network and re-subscribe on the other, a time-consuming and expensive process.

Until now, Spiko MMFs were deployed natively across multiple networks — but investors couldn’t move their shares from one chain to another. The only workaround was to redeem on Network A and re-subscribe on Network B — a clunky, time-consuming, and costly process. That’s officially a thing of the past. - Spiko