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Regulated Liability Network identifies proof-of-concept case with digital pound

The RLN, which places tokenized assets and liabilities on the same ledger, was tested with simulated cross-border CBDC transactions in a previous project.

The Regulated Liability Network (RLN) has completed its United Kingdom discovery phase and is prepared to proceed to a use case with retail central bank digital currency (CBDC), according to its latest report. The RLN project seeks to accommodate central bank, commercial bank and regulated non-bank transactions operating within “partitions” on a single network.

The RLN is a regulated financial marketplace infrastructure in the U.K. with contributors from financial institutions worldwide. It is supported by the advocacy group UK Finance.

The RLN discovery phase examined three potential use cases for the network — consumer domestic payment, wholesale cross-border payment and securities settlement — and settled on the first case to pursue a proof of concept. The report noted many domestic payment uses that could be tested and cited the list presented in the results of Project Rosalind as examples. The report said:

“This use case would help explore how ‘upgraded’ commercial bank money could sit alongside a retail CBDC, how RLN could accommodate both forms of money on a single infrastructure, and how the functional equivalence of all retail digital money could be ensured.”

The report found that the RLN provided several benefits for domestic payment. It helped provide consistency between CBDC and commercial bank money, thus helping preserve the singularity of the currency. It could also help reduce authorized push payment fraud, that is, payments authorized to fraudulent merchants, and give consumers more control in case of undelivered goods. Finally, it would also improve settlement time.

Flow chart for a consumer domestic settlement on RLN. Source: UK Finance

The RLN would use a native settlement token and thus contain tokenized regulated money and digital assets on the same ledger. Tokenized liabilities (money) would remain claims on the issuer, rather than on the RLN.

Related: SWIFT says it has reached a ‘breakthrough’ in recent CBDC experiments

The project completed a pilot program for wholesale cross-border payments in conjunction with the New York Federal Reserve Bank and several large financial institutions earlier this year. Now, however, it says this particular use case “may be the least feasible for a PoC [proof of concept] due to the complexity of dealing with multiple jurisdictions, participants (including central banks) and regulatory requirements.”

Securities settlement was judged to have a medium degree of feasibility due to the multiple non-bank parties involved and regulatory complexity.

The RLN does not crucially depend on blockchain technology. The report identifies five infrastructure architectures that it could operate on. The RLN closely resembles the “unified ledger” solution proposed by the Bank of International Settlements and the International Monetary Fund’s “trusted single ledger,” also introduced in June. The report’s authors also noted the project’s resemblance to a pilot conducted by the Swiss National Bank and the SIX digital exchange, and Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey’s proposed “enhanced digital money.”

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Digital euro can ward off a host of private payment service ills: ECB official

Private payment services can gain a monopoly over services with no benefit to other market players or economic stability, ECB board member Fabio Panetta said.

The European Central Bank (ECB) is quite happy with the European Commission's (EC) legislative proposals for the digital euro. ECB executive board member Fabio Panetta told the European Parliament’s Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs in a speech on Sept. 4 that the proposals “put Europe at the forefront of advanced economies” in CBDC development, potentially heading off private dominance of the financial sector and the ills that implies.

The EC made its proposals public on June 28. Panetta, a critic of cryptocurrency, called the EC proposals for the euro central bank digital currency (CBDC) “a new paradigm for preserving monetary sovereignty” that would ensure Europeans always have access to a public payment option, whether it was cash or digital, even as “closed-loop solutions are becoming increasingly prevalent” in private payment services. Panetta compared private payment systems to private messaging, where users are pressured to join the most popular systems.

The EC proposed giving the digital euro the status of legal tender, making its acceptance for payment mandatory. Panetta also praised the EC’s privacy proposals for the digital euro. He specified:

“The Eurosystem would be unable to see the personal details of digital euro users or connect any payment information to private individuals. Intermediaries would only see the user information needed for onboarding and compliance with existing regulation.”

“Furthermore, the possibility to pay offline would provide cash-like privacy, with neither the intermediary nor the central bank processing the payment,” Panetta said.

The proposals also included reasonable pricing policies and allowing the ECB to maintain equilibrium in the financial systems with tools like holding limits. Panetta said:

“Let me emphasise, once again, that the issuance of a digital euro represents an opportunity, not a risk, for the European financial sector.”

The alternative to introducing a CBDC is not maintaining the status quo. Rather, it is losing ground to new private solutions that could impact the economy, Panetta said. He held PayPal’s recently introduced PYUSD stablecoin up as an example of potential risk.

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Private payment service providers seek to gain market share and have no motivation to restrict their range of services or make them compatible with other services. As a result, a private service could attain a monopoly position on the market, as has happened before, Panetta explained.

In contrast, the digital euro “would pay due attention to orderly adjustments in the financial sector while offering payment service providers a platform for innovations with pan-euro area reach,” he said.

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Bank of China: Retailers must offer digital yuan payment option

In the short term, the e-commerce platforms can integrate the CBDC through QR codes.

While China’s central bank digital currency (CBDC) goes through technological and business model upgrades, the market should provide an opportunity to include it in all online retail payment options, according to a statement made by Changchun Mu, director of the Digital Currency Research Institute of the People’s Bank of China, on Sept. 3.

Giving a speech at the annual China International Service Trade Fair, Mu expressed the desire of digital yuan developers to see it at hand in every retail scenario. According to the official, Chinese CBDC, officially known as the renminbi, has “undergone a major upgrade” in terms of its “organizational forms” and business model. Now it’s the turn of the payment tools to be upgraded.

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Mu mentioned commercial banks’ apps and such platforms as WeChat and Alipay, reminding them of their obligation to comply with regulations. In the short term, they can focus on implementing the QR codes for CBDC, while upgrading the payment tools in the long term.

The official brought up the wholesale payments issue as well. According to Mu, there is no need to completely change the current interbank payment and settlement systems. It would be enough to integrate the CBDC payment option into it. However, no technical details of such integration were mentioned during the speech.

China continues its work on the blockchain backed, yet fully controlled digital infrastructure. In August, Chinese government officials unveiled a new data exchange powered by blockchain. The newly established Hangzhou Data Exchange will streamline the exchange of corporate information technology data by leveraging distributed ledger technology.

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Digital rupee gets big usability boost through Yes Bank integration with UPI

Yes Bank’s app UPI integration is the first for the Indian retail CBDC, which has seen a variety of projects since its pilot launch since December.

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) central bank digital currency (CBDC), the digital rupee, will have enhanced usability, Yes Bank announced Aug. 30. This was thanks to Yes Bank’s integration of the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) with the RBI digital rupee app. Now Yes Bank account holders will be able to make transactions with the digital rupee by scanning UPI QR codes.

The UPI is a national payment portal operated by the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI), a division of the RBI. The NPCI provides the infrastructure for both the UPI and the digital rupee. The UPI is used by 150 million merchants in India, according to local press reports.

The Yes Bank app marks the first integration of the UPI with the CBDC. Yes Bank executive Ajay Rajan said in a statement:

“The transition to an interoperable CBDC platform holds the promise of seamless, efficient, and broader transactional capabilities for YES BANK customers. […] This transformational enabler will facilitate a quantum leap in CBDC usage, driven by the enhanced convenience and accessibility.”

Yes Bank was one of the eight original participating banks in the retail digital rupee pilot project, which launched in December. The project enlisted 5,000 participating merchants and 50,000 CBDC users and had carried out 800,000 transactions worth $134 million by February. A separate wholesale digital rupee pilot was launched in November.

Related: JPMorgan uses blockchain for 24/7 dollar transfers with Indian banks

The digital rupee is already accepted at some of the stores in the country's large Reliance Retail chain through a program using QR codes that began in February in conjunction with ICICI Bank, Kotak Mahindra Bank and Innoviti Technologies.

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IBM offers guidance for successful implementation of digital euro

Five members of IBM Consulting created a list of points that the European Commission could consider to optimize its proposed digital euro legislation.

IBM has some ideas about what it will take to make the digital euro a success, which it shared in a recent blog post. It suggested five items for designers to help the European Central Bank (ECB) digital currency “enter the highly competitive, multifaceted, and heterogeneous payments landscape in the Eurozone.”

Some of IBM's points are already found in the European Commission (EC) legislative proposal. “Build on existing rails,” the first point, is already foreseen in the EC plan, although it can be extended, the five authors said. Simplicity will be key to initial adoption, they reasoned, and familiarity reinforces that.

Intermediaries will also have a role to play in digital euro acceptance, and the digital currency should be designed to accommodate their needs:

“We see a need for a more granular ecosystem of intermediaries. The future intermediary landscape for the digital euro should be envisioned as multi-level. Planning for more than one intermediary between the retail user and ECB’s digital euro components would better support smaller intermediaries.”

Standardization of APIs would simplify integration and encourage competition, the post said.

Possible intermediation schemes for the digital euro. Source: Digitale Perspektive

The EC proposal includes strong offline privacy guarantees that could be extended to online activities to ensure end-to-end transaction privacy, IBM suggested. The proposed legislation offers privacy measures “consistent with current digital payment’s privacy levels.” IBM said privacy rules need to be harmonized with several existing regulations, including reporting thresholds, to ensure that reporting is siloed.

Related: UK financial watchdog announces launch of permanent Digital Sandbox in August

Distributed ledger technology is not essential for the creation of a digital euro, the authors noted, but blockchain technology offers the most benefits. Its operation need not be any more carbon-intensive than non-blockchain systems, they added.

Finally, go slowly but surely, IBM advises. Start with a minimal viable product for faster time to market and a sandbox to deal with the great complexity of the future digital euro’s operating environment.

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Jamaican taxi drivers bullish on accepting Jam-Dex CBDC

Jam-Dex would be significantly transformative for the public transportation sector and needs to be embraced, believes Aldo Antonio.

Bus and taxi operators in Jamaica are eager to use the country’s in-house central bank digital currency (CBDC)Jam-Dex — as locals seek operational efficiencies and reduced costs and security risks.

The Central Bank of Jamacia launched Jam-Dex, short for Jamaican Digital Exchange, in 2022, which was supported by an airdrop event to expedite its widespread adoption. More recently, Aldo Antonio, co-founder and acting executive chairman of the National Transporters Alliance Group (NTAG), revealed his efforts to spread Jam-Dex adoption among the transport community.

According to a local report from the Jamaica Observer, Antonio sees a lower curiosity in CBDCs among bus and taxi drivers — primarily due to a sluggish adoption rate among vendors and consumers. Regardless, Antonio remains optimistic:

“I see Jam-Dex as something that would be significantly transformative for the public transportation sector and needs to be embraced.”

In order to make Jam-Dex feasible, Antonio believes Jamaica needs more customers willing to use the CBDC. Failure to attract customers will discourage merchants and eventually result in the total abandonment of digital currency.

According to Antonio, food and transportation are the two main verticals that can increase the day-to-day Jam-Dex usage. He added:

“If we can get them [Jamaicans] moving and paying for transportation using Jam-Dex on a daily basis, it increases the rate at which we can get the digital currency into people’s hands.”

Moreover, CBDC’s widespread adoption eradicates the drivers’ concerns related to carrying cash or giving back the exact change. Jamaica is currently working toward enabling the CBDC services on mobile phones of the general public. “With that happening and training happening, then the sector could be in a position by January, if not before, to be able to accept Jam-Dex-type payments,” Antonio concluded.

An estimated 25,000–30,000 transport owners reside in Jamaica, who can help expand Jam-Dex’s reach beyond the existing 10,000 vendors with 200,000 people who use the CBDC through the digital wallet Lynk.

Related: Crypto Twitter is not happy with the name and logo of Jamaica’s CBDC

While Jamaica aims to bank on taxi drivers to expedite its CBDC adoption, Japanese auto-maker Nissan ramped up its Web3 efforts.

In Q1 2023, Nissan filed four new Web3-related trademarks in the United States. In addition, its Japan unit is experimenting with auto sales in the metaverse. The filings to the United States Patent and Trademark Office reveal Nissan’s plans to create virtual clothes, cars, headgear, trading cards, toys, tickets and a nonfungible token (NFT) marketplace for trading and minting NFTs.

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Only 17% of Russians would agree to store more than $200 in CBDC

The most common hindrances cited include insufficient information about the technology (22%) and concerns about cybertheft and system failures (21%).

According to a recent survey conducted by the joint team of Saint Petersburg Exchange and the Russian Trading System (RTS), more than half of Russian citizens are willing to store their money in a central bank digital currency (CBDC). However, when it comes to storing more than 20,000 rubles (roughly $212), only 17% trust the digital ruble. 

The survey involved over 2,000 respondents across the country aged 18–65, and its results were published in the local newspaper Izvestia on Aug. 24. According to the report, 58.3% of responders are theoretically ready to put their money into the CBDC.

But the majority of them (23.8%) would transfer only a sum of 5,000 ($53) to 20,000 rubles ($212) to digital money. 9% of respondents can imagine storing 20,00–50,000 rubles ($212–$529) in the CBDC, 2% — an amount up to 100,000 rubles ($1,058). As to the idea of storing all their money in the central bank digital currency, only 2.4% are willing to do it.

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The most common hindrances cited include insufficient information about the technology (22%) and concerns about cybertheft and system failures (21%).

On Aug. 15, Russia began testing operations with digital rubles. The pilot tests involve the participation of 13 banks and a restricted group of their clients. The initial phase centers on perfecting fundamental operations. This phase prioritizes key processes including the establishment and funding of digital ruble accounts, facilitating individual-to-individual digital ruble transactions, streamlining automated payments, and innovatively employing QR codes for seamless purchase and service transactions

According to the first deputy governor of the Bank of Russia, Olga Skorobogatova, the bank’s strategy involves bringing the digital ruble into widespread use by 2025–2027.

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CBDCs offer faster settlements: Citi survey of global securities firms

The year-on-year growing support CBDCs is supported by ongoing domestic pilots and cross-border initiatives in various jurisdictions, banking giant Citi found.

Discussions around shortening local financial settlement cycles within the next five years have most securities firms eyeing central bank digital currencies (CBDCs)

CitiBank’s latest edition of the Securities Services Evolution whitepaper highlighted India’s recent move to T+1 settlements, which ensures all trade-related settlements conclude within 24 hours of a transaction. As the United States and Canada, among other leading economies, step up efforts to transition to T+1 settlement cycles, the CitiBank survey gauges the importance of distributed ledger technology (DLT), CBDCs and stablecoins in expediting this transition.

Global economies transitioning to faster settlement times. Source: Citibank

87% of the 483 survey respondents and 12 financial markets infrastructures (FMIs) see CBDCs as a viable option for shorter settlement cycles by 2026. The support for CBDCs saw a near 21% increase from securities firms when compared to the previous year.

Expected form of digital money to be used to support securities settlements. Source: Citibank

The year-on-year growing support for digital cash is supported by domestic pilots and cross-border initiatives. The Citibank report read:

“Recent crossborder multi-bank experiments are now providing detailed insights into how central bank funding can be operationalized in a digital context, both internally and across entire markets.”

However, over the next years, some of the major roadblocks to widespread adoption of digital assets include regulatory uncertainties, limited knowledge, backward compatibility with traditional financial systems and blockchain interoperabilities, among others, as listed below.

Top impediment to the widespread use of digital assets in the next three years. Source: Citibank

Out of the various financial institutions, institutional investors, banks and asset managers have the greatest ability to scale and deliver market-wide solutions, a crucial determinant to the widespread adoption of CBDCs, stablecoins and other centrally governable financial instruments.

In the coming five years, by 2028, financial aspirations will move beyond T+1, envisions Citibank’s report. Some anticipated changes will include the mainstreaming of DLTs, shorter settlement cycles, digital cash-focused funding mechanisms and removal of core banking systems.

Related: Canadians have ‘weak incentives’ to use a CBDC: Bank of Canada

Just a month after India pitched the idea of conducting cross-border payments using its CBDC to 18 central banks, the Reserve Bank of Australia completed its in-house CBDC pilot.

The Australian central bank believes that a CBDC may support financial innovation in areas such as debt securities markets, could promote innovation in emerging private digital money sectors and enhance resilience and inclusion within the wider digital economy.

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Payments Giant Mastercard Launches New Program With Ripple and Other Firms To Foster Collaboration on CBDC

Payments Giant Mastercard Launches New Program With Ripple and Other Firms To Foster Collaboration on CBDC

Payments processing giant Mastercard is rallying support for a new program focused on central bank digital currencies (CBDC) as countries worldwide mull issuing their own version of the government-backed assets. In a statement, Mastercard announced the launch of the CBDC Partner Program, an initiative that aims to engage key players to drive CBDC innovation and […]

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US Congressman Issues Warning on CBDCs, Says They Pose an ‘Existential Threat’ to Western Civilization

US Congressman Issues Warning on CBDCs, Says They Pose an ‘Existential Threat’ to Western Civilization

US Congressman Warren Davidson warns that central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) could result in a dystopian future. The Ohio Republican tells his 78,900 X followers that he believes CBDCs could transform money into a powerful means of governmental control and plans to introduce legislation to criminalize the development of these types of digital assets. “To […]

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