Sui says the Hashi Global coalition is moving toward a July testnet focused on native Bitcoin collateral. The network framed the initiative as infrastructure for institutions that want to use BTC directly on-chain without relying on bridges or wrapped assets.
In an official post on X, Sui said institutions remain cautious toward wrapped BTC and bridge-based collateral models. Hashi is being positioned as an alternative that keeps Bitcoin native, verifiable and controllable for collateral use cases.
JUST IN 👀
Institutions are losing trust in bridges and wrapped BTC, seeking more secure alternatives for their investments. $SUI
Institutions prefer native BTC for its verifiable and controllable nature, making it usable as collateral, as explained by @EvanWeb3
The Hashi… https://t.co/cyfssuXgLU pic.twitter.com/9MWfD9mmd1
— Sui Community💧 (@Community_Sui) July 14, 2026
Hashi Targets Native BTC Collateral Testing
The main operational update is the preparation of a test environment rather than a live production rollout. Sui said the Hashi global testnet is imminent and directed builders toward additional technical discussion from @EvanWeb3.
That testnet framing matters because builder access does not yet equal production availability. The project is entering a validation phase where participants can begin examining design assumptions before any broader deployment.
Sui has not yet detailed the full access model, custody design or rollout mechanics for the testnet. Those details will be important for understanding how Hashi intends to preserve native Bitcoin control while enabling collateral functionality across on-chain environments.
Wrapped Bitcoin Risk Shapes the Product Narrative
Hashi’s core pitch is built around reducing reliance on synthetic or wrapped Bitcoin representations. For institutions, collateral quality depends not only on asset value, but also on custody guarantees, verification paths and the ability to control exposure without bridge dependency.
That positioning reflects a broader institutional concern around cross-chain risk. Wrapped assets can improve liquidity and composability, but they also introduce additional trust assumptions around issuers, bridge contracts and redemption mechanics.
By focusing on native BTC collateral, Hashi is attempting to connect Bitcoin liquidity with programmable financial infrastructure while avoiding some of the perceived weaknesses of wrapped models. The durability of that approach will depend on technical execution and clear custody architecture.
For now, Sui has confirmed Hashi’s near-term direction as a July testnet centered on native Bitcoin collateral. The next useful indicators will be testnet access details, supported functionality, custody mechanics and whether builders can verify the model before any production deployment.








