Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
International Business Times
International Business Times
Business
Isaiah McCall

Google Blockchain is Here, Should You Invest in in It?

Google (Credit: IBTimes US)

Google has revealed new details about its in-development blockchain, the Google Cloud Universal Ledger (GCUL). In a LinkedIn post, Rich Widmann, Google's head of Web3 strategy, described the project as the result of "years of R&D," designed to provide a neutral infrastructure layer for global finance with support for Python-based smart contracts.

"Any financial institution can build with GCUL," Widmann said, positioning the network as a shared layer rather than one tied to a competitor's ecosystem.

What's Up With Google Building a "Planet-Scale" Blockchain?

The blockchain wars among fintech giants are heating up. Stripe is building Tempo, a payments-centric chain tied to its $1.4 trillion processing rails, while Circle has launched Arc, designed around its USDC stablecoin.

Google's pitch is different: rather than locking adoption to a single corporate ecosystem, GCUL is meant to be shared plumbing—much like Ethereum or Polkadot—and a ledger financial institutions can adopt without being tied to a competitor's core business.

According to Widmann's post, GCUL aims to be "planet-scale," supporting billions of users and bank-grade functionality.

  • Stripe's Tempo: focused on merchant flows.
  • Circle's Arc: stablecoin-native chain with FX and settlement tools.
  • Google's GCUL: open infrastructure with Python smart contracts and institutional-grade tokenization.

If Google is able to capture even a portion of Web3, that's $4Tn market that they can play with. Maybe it's time to load up on Alphabet stock?

Here's What Comes Next for GCUL

Stablecoins remain above $200 billion, underscoring the demand for trusted settlement rails. Layer-1 DeFi activity has grown 35% YoY, even amid broader market volatility. If GCUL can position itself as a neutral base for these flows, it could capture a meaningful share of tokenization and settlement volumes.

Google plans to release technical details "in the coming months" as it works toward a full-scale rollout with CME and other partners.

The big question is whether institutions will embrace Google's claim of neutrality or if reliance on a tech giant will simply replace one form of centralization with another.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.