Quant Network builds its business around banks, central banks, and large financial institutions, not everyday crypto users.Its core product, Overledger, is designed to solve a problem most retail users never face. It connects incompatible blockchain networks with legacy banking systems.
Large regulated institutions need that interoperability to move data and assets across different platforms at scale.
Retail users trade tokens on one chain. Banks need to move regulated money across dozens of private and public ledgers at once, and that's the gap Quant fills.
What Does Quant Network Actually Sell?
Quant's product is Overledger, described by the company as a universal API gateway that links traditional financial systems with blockchain networks. Overledger connects digital money, assets, existing payment rails, banking infrastructures, financial applications, and the blockchain ecosystem.
Developers and institutions pay to access it. Organizations who intend to use Overledger in their operations require $QNT to pay the necessary licensing fees. Those tokens get locked, typically for a year.
Why Do Banks and Governments Need This More Than Retail Users?
Retail crypto users mostly care about one thing: does this token move between wallets and exchanges. Banks and central banks face a harder technical problem.
- Different banks run on different private ledgers, such as Hyperledger Fabric or R3 Corda, that were never built to talk to each other.
- Central banks piloting digital currencies need those currencies to interact with commercial bank systems and public blockchains without custom, one-off integrations for every pair of systems.
- Regulated institutions can't use anonymous bridges or wrapped tokens, since compliance and audit trails are mandatory.
Quant's interoperability enables these systems to connect, allowing banks to share transaction data and improve settlement efficiency. A retail user swapping tokens on a decentralized exchange never runs into this problem, so there's no consumer market for what Quant sells.
Real Institutions Already Using Overledger
Quant's client list is a good way to see the enterprise focus in practice.
- Quant was selected by UK Finance and a consortium of leading commercial banks, including Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds Banking Group, NatWest, Nationwide, Santander, and more recently Monzo as its seventh participant, to provide the technology underpinning the UK's tokenised sterling deposits project. The pilots are now expected to run through the end of 2026, ahead of a planned 2027 rollout as a full financial market infrastructure platform.
- In May 2025, the European Central Bank selected Quant as a pioneer partner for the digital euro project.
- The Bank of England worked with Quant on Project Rosalind, testing programmable features for real-time notifications and automated refunds.
- The Bank for International Settlements engaged Quant in the Regulated Liability Network, where 11 major financial institutions chose Quant alongside R3 for building compliant asset transfer systems.
How Does This Shape $QNT's Tokenomics?
$QNT has a fixed maximum supply of approximately 14.88 million tokens, with every enterprise or developer using Overledger required to pay an annual license fee, denominated in fiat but paid specifically in $QNT, and those tokens are then locked in the Treasury for a set period, reducing circulating supply. This creates demand tied to enterprise onboarding rather than retail trading volume, which is why price moves for $QNT tend to track institutional news rather than social media hype.
As of early July 2026, $QNT trades in the $65 to $70 range, with a market cap of roughly $790 to $820 million, and a circulating supply of about 12.07 million tokens against the fixed maximum of 14.88 million. Analysts covering the token in June 2026 highlighted Quant's launch of Overledger Fusion Rollup, which connects 74 public and private blockchains for institutional use without relying on bridges or wrapped tokens. The platform is designed for use cases such as unified liquidity pools and embedded KYC for banks rather than retail applications.
A Different Approach to CBDCs
Recent central bank moves reinforce Quant's enterprise strategy. On 1 January 2026, China pivoted its e-CNY programme away from retail CBDC, where the central bank issued digital currency directly to consumers, toward interest-bearing tokenised deposits issued by commercial banks, after retail CBDC failed to achieve meaningful adoption. That shift mirrors exactly where Quant has focused all along: the commercial and wholesale layer, not the consumer wallet.
Conclusion
Quant Network's technology solves interoperability problems specific to regulated institutions: connecting private bank ledgers, public blockchains, and central bank settlement systems without bridges or wrapped assets. Its licensing-based tokenomics, fixed $QNT supply of 14.88 million tokens, growing bank consortium in the GBTD pilot, and client roster of central banks all reflect that enterprise focus rather than a retail trading use case.
- Overledger - Quant Network: Overledger platform overview
- Quant selected to deliver infrastructure for UK's tokenised sterling deposits project: Quant press release, September 2025
- Tokenised sterling deposits: UK Finance project page, updated participant list
- Great British Tokenised Deposit Project, Written Evidence: UK Parliament written evidence, March 2026
- Quant's Strategic Partnerships: The Backbone of Enterprise Blockchain: BSC News analysis
- Tokenised deposits, stablecoins and wholesale CBDCs: Quant Network perspectives
- What Is Quant ($QNT)? Cross-Chain Interoperability Explained: Gate Learn
- What is Quant? ($QNT): Kraken Learn
- Latest Quant News: CoinMarketCap AI updates
- Quant price today: DigitalCoinPrice
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