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Digital Dollar Project completes CBDC retail remittance pilot with Western Union

The project simulated transfers to customers of BDO Unibank in the Philippines with improved settlement time, cost and transparency.

The Digital Dollar Project (DDP) announced the completion of a pilot study of remittance payments to the Philippines using a simulated retail central bank digital currency (rCBDC). Western Union and BDO Unibank were partners in the project.

The project used a version of the DDP’s Champion Model. In it, a simulated central bank issued CBDCs to an intermediary bank, which provided access to it to Western Union (WU) for remittance to a BDO Unibank customer in the Philippines. WU used a decentralized exchange (DEX) to trade a dollar CBDC for a Philippine peso CBDC at a real-time rate set by a third-party oracle. WU received payment confirmation and transferred the amount to the bank customer’s account.

Remittance transfer scheme. Source: The Digital Dollar Project

The transaction used central bank money, as opposed to commercial bank money, for the entirety of the transaction, in contrast to current practice. The DEX was a primary feature of the study. The authors noted that the development of such an exchange could have the advantages of creating competition and increasing transparency. They noted, however, that most remittances to the Philippines take place when trading is closed in Manila, so that leg remains problematic.

Privacy issues were not addressed in the study, though the report noted that distributed ledger technology helps preserve privacy “by allowing for granular control over the level of consumer data sharing.”

Related: CBDCs should protect privacy, not be a surveillance tool: Former CFTC chair

By using distributed ledger technology, the transfer of the message and transfer of value took place simultaneously and within seconds. With current technology, value transfer takes longer than message transfer, introducing counterparty and credit risk. The authors concluded:

“The pilot demonstrated that rather than displacing the service offerings of Western Union and BDO Unibank, CBDCs present an opportunity to modernize processes and promote efficiencies for private sector companies and their customers." 

Remittances are typically valued at $200-$300 per transaction. They had a total value of $626 billion in 2022, according to research cited in the report. In 2021, $74 billion in remittances were sent from the United States. Seven percent of U.S. households sent remittance abroad.

Remittances from the U.S. to the Philippines usually cost 4.4% on a total transaction of $200, with bank transfers costing 7.98% on average. The simulated process would save time and money, as well as increase transparency.

The DDP, co-founded by former Commodity Futures Trading Commission Chair Christopher Giancarlo, launched its technical sandbox in September. Accenture also provided support for the project.

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MIT Digital Currency Initiative introduces at-scale, programmable CBDC platform

PARSEC (Parallelized Architecture for Scalably Executing Smart Contracts) runs on the ERC-20 standard, so it could have other applications too.

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Digital Currency Initiative (DCI) has introduced the experimental Parallelized Architecture for Scalably Executing Smart Contracts (PARSEC) platform. The platform is open-source and developed with central bank digital currency (CBDC) in mind. 

The developers highlighted the platform’s speed. It performed 118,000 ERC-20 transactions per second on 128 hosts – exceeding public permissionless blockchains, they said. The platform was thus capable of handling cross-border contracting, and could be used to innovate supply chains and compliance checks as well.

PARSEC logo. Source: MIT DCI

PARSEC supports ERC-20 tokens, so an automated market maker launched on the platform could transact with such assets as bonds, tokenized securities and repurchase agreements in addition to CBDC. Because it supports virtual machines, it would simplify interactions between central and commercial banks.

The platform required “significant” amounts of continuing research, the developers said. They pointed to security, key management, and data migration tooling as areas that required refinement. Privacy was also left as an open question.

Related: Standard Chartered, PwC make case for programmable CBDC in China Greater Bay Area

Privacy of CBDCs is a particularly painful point for the crypto community, which is largely opposed to any form of CBDC. Programmability is no less controversial. The PARSEC summary stated:

“We focused on smart contracts because they provide the highest degree of expressivity and functionality to users.”

That functionality is exactly what many in the crypto community objects to. Crypto researcher Nikhil Raghuveera stated in Cointelegraph in April:

“Programmability allows for asset backing and decentralization that is not possible under current CBDC designs. Developers should be taking advantage of the programmable opportunities that stable[coin] assets offer rather than trying to compete with CBDCs.”

Programmability allows restrictions to be placed on the uses of a digital currency, which can be useful in a decentralized finance environment, but it could enable governmental overreach in a CBDC by preventing certain purchases or imposing conditions such as negative interest, opponents argue.

PARSEC is the result of research conducted in 2022. It is another product of Project Hamilton, a joint undertaking by the DCI and the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. Project Hamilton was declared completed in late 2022, shortly after a group of Republicans in the United States House of Representatives wrote to the head of the Boston Fed expressing their reservations about the project.

The Fed has stated repeatedly that it would not introduce a CBDC without a Congressional mandate, but CBDC research by the Fed is continuing.

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Nigeria’s SEC warns against trading on Binance

The agency insists that the platform doesn’t have a license to work in the country and that its operation is illegal.

The Securities and Exchange Commission of Nigeria (SEC) issued a warning for local investors against using one of the world’s largest crypto exchanges, Binance. It refers to the previous circular, issued against the fraudulent company, which had been illegally using Binance brand. 

On July 28, the SEC issued a warning against investing with Binance. The Commission insists that the platform doesn’t have a license to work in the country and hence its operation is illegal. It also reminds the public about a high level of risk and potential total loss of investments:

“Any member of the investing public dealing with the entity, making such solicitation is doing so at his/her own risk.” 

Earlier, in June, the Commission published a circular, limiting the activities of Binance Nigeria. Essentially, the circular represented the same kind of warning for investors and platform, as the one it has published now. However, Binance Nigeria was a fraudulent entity without any real affiliation with Binance. Back then, Binance representatives issued a cease and desist notice to Binance Nigeria Limited.

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Nigeria holds a cautious stance on crypto industry, at the same time promoting its central bank digital currency (CBDC). However, since its launch in 2021, adoption rates of eNaira have fallen below expectations, prompting the central bank to explore several options to drive usage. In July, it upgraded the CBDC system with Near Field Communication (NFC) technology, enhancing the contactless payments.

From May 2023, the country introduced a 10% tax on gains from the disposal of digital assets, including cryptocurrencies. Local stakeholders called the measure “premature”.

Cointelegraph reached out to Binance for further commentaries on the SEC notice.

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As to Binance and other unregistered platforms, the SEC demands them to immediately stop the soliciting of its services in the country. 

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South Korea to pilot CBDC in one of these three cities, not Seoul

South Korea pushes forward with its CBDC pilot and targets three potential test regions for issuing and distributing the digital currency.

The Bank of Korea has narrowed down three regions for the piloting of its central bank digital currency (CBDC), which does not include the country’s capital Seoul, according to a report from a local South Korean media outlet. 

On July 31, it was confirmed that the Bank of Korea has chosen Jeju, Busan and Incheon as its candidates for the “private target CBDC test bed.”

Eventually, according to the report, the Bank plans to select one of the aforementioned regions, along with experimenting with payments and distribution at a public level and securing franchises that can accept payments via CBDC. 

An official at the bank is reported to have said:

“The CBDC electronic wallet app will allow not only local residents but also many civilians, such as tourists to [partake]."

The Bank of Korea said that the regional closed tests of the CBDC will be similar to the issuance and distribution of the current local currency scheme in place in various regions of South Korea. 

The local currency scheme was introduced during the COVID-19 pandemic as a basic income and relief payment solution. Jeju, Busan and Incheon - the regions mentioned as candidates for the pilot - all current issue and distribute their own local currencies such as 'Tamranjeon', 'Dongbaekjeon', and 'Incheon e-Eum', respectively. 

Related: South Korea strengthens crypto regulation with LEI adoption and crime unit

An official from a commercial bank in Korea is reported to have said that in Busan the number of eligible citizens is “so large that the Bank of Korea is burdened in many ways” and therefore the choice was “greatly inclined” to Jeju which has the second largest population.

According to the local report, the local currency scheme has fewer “technical barriers” to overcome compared to CBDCs. 

Multiple banks in South Korea have released information that they are conducting research on stablecoins as CBDC alternatives for efficiency purposes.

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Chinese, Indian investment professionals show strong support for CBDC in new survey

The CFA Institute asked members around the world how they felt about CBDCs. Their responses might surprise the crypto community.

The CFA Institute, the professional association that provides Chartered Financial Analyst credentialing, surveyed its members on their perceptions of central bank digital currency (CBDC), saying it wanted to examine the demand-side outlook on the financial technology. 

The survey found a wide array of opinions that depended on the location and even the age of the respondents. The response was generally unenthusiastic. Although 47% of respondents said they had a moderate understanding of CBDCs and 42% said they believed that central banks should launch digital versions of fiat currencies (with 24% having no opinion), there was a wide divergence between those in developed and emerging markets.

Investment professionals in the United States showed the least support for a CBDC launch, at 31%, compared with 37% in favor in developed markets overall. In emerging markets, support averaged 61%, with support reaching 66% in India and 70% in China. Bankers showed more support (50% at commercial banks, 51% at investment banks) than asset managers (38%).

Support for CBDCs by geography. Source: CFA Institute

The most common reason for supporting CBDCs was accelerated payments and transfers (58%). That was followed by the somewhat cryptic proposition that central authorities should play a central role in the development of cryptocurrencies (30%).

Privacy was the most common objection (50%). That was followed by a lack of use case (40%). Only 10% of respondents thought a CBDC would be harmful to banks. Forty-six percent of respondents overall thought a CBDC would have little or no impact on financial inclusion. However, the regional variation in responses was pronounced, as a clear majority in China (66%) and India (64%) thought a CBDC would improve inclusion, with U.S. respondents coming in lowest at 24%.

Related: Existential threat? Why some banks are anxious about CBDCs

Willingness to use a CBDC showed similar distributions. Bankers and those under the age of 45 showed the greatest willingness to use one.

The survey received more responses by far from the U.S. than any other country. The institute sent over 94,000 surveys to its members and recorded a response rate of 5%. Eighty-five percent of respondents were male.

CBDCs are controversial in the crypto community and politically divisive in the United States. The responses of the investment professionals reflect a distinctly different outlook on the issue.

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Existential threat? Why some banks are anxious about CBDCs

The prospect of a retail CBDC has some major banks anxious over their revenue streams.

In the current climate, which is pretty hostile for the digital assets industry following the failures of 2022, central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) are often perceived as “crypto killers.”

This is hardly an overstatement, as financial authorities’ aspirations concerning CBDCs are relatively straightforward: return firmer control over the movement of money before it gets too decentralized.

Governments around the world are becoming more proactive in that direction. According to a survey by the Bank for International Settlements, 93% of central banks are already researching CBDCs, and there could be up to 24 CBDCs in circulation by 2030.

What is largely missing from the public discussion on CBDCs, especially within the crypto community, is that — besides crypto — national digital currencies actually have a very powerful adversary: banks.

For private financial institutions, the idea of a de facto state-controlled ecosystem of payments and transactions represents an existential threat, in no way less than private cryptocurrencies. Will they try to slow the CBDC revolution or choose to adapt to it?

How CBDCs challenge traditional banks

JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon is famous for his anti-crypto stance, calling the industry nothing more than “a decentralized Ponzi scheme.” When asked about CBDCs, the banker’s response was less passionate but no less anxious:

“I don’t trust it will be properly done. [...] There’s a lot more to banking services than the actual token that moves the money. There are fraud risk alert services, call centers, bank branches, ATMs, CRA.” 

While there’s definitely a lot more to banking services than money movement, this abundance of opportunities would lose steam in the event of mass divestment, even if it happened exclusively among individual customers, not to mention corporate clients. 

By allowing individuals and businesses to hold and transact directly with the central bank, CBDCs could dilute the body of deposits and accounts and, hence, the money mass manipulated by private banking institutions.

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In his recent article on the matter, former Greek Minister of Finance Yanis Varoufakis cited the example of First Republic Bank. In May, when First Republic failed, its assets were sold to JPMorgan in violation of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s cardinal rule that no bank owning more than 10% of insured U.S. deposits should be allowed to absorb another U.S. bank.

While such a move, sanctioned by the United States government, puts even more potential risk on the financial system, it could have been easily avoided with the help of a CBDC. Then, the Federal Reserve could directly save the funds of First Republic customers by putting them in Fed-guaranteed CBDC deposits. In that case, though, JPMorgan wouldn’t get $92 billion in fresh deposits.

However, it’s not only “too big to fail” institutions that have reasons to fear forgone profit. In an economic shock scenario where depositors seek refuge for their money, the smaller banks, despite all their mom-and-pop charm, would be the first to lose panicking clients should depositors have an opportunity to transfer their funds directly to central banks. In that sense, CBDCs could even worsen financial instability, noted Jonathan Guthrie in the Financial Times.

There are other issues as well, such as potential competition from the CBDC public operators or their private partners. For now, central banks tend to limit their digital currency ambitions with payments and transfers, but what exactly should stop them from broadening their scope of options in the future?

Bankers are well aware of such a scenario. In April 2023, representatives of both European private and public banking institutions voiced their cautious support for a “digital euro” — the initiative cherished by the European Union authorities. But some statements were heavily marked by worry. Jerome Grivet, deputy CEO of French bank Crédit Agricole, stated clearly:

“Central bank digital money could threaten the traditional banks’ business model by competing with their collection activity and disrupting their financing capacity.”

To avoid this, Grivet emphasized that the digital euro should be limited to use as a payment method rather than a store of value. Burkhard Balz, a member of the executive board at Deutsche Bundesbank, further suggested that central banks should be cautious about expanding their role too much in the digital euro ecosystem. He even proposed that the private sector should be responsible for distributing the digital euro.

Is it that bad?

“I don’t think there’s fear among banks regarding CBDCs, at least not yet,” Nihar Neelakanti, CEO of a Web3 project Ecosapiens, explained to Cointelegraph. “Right now, there’s more curiosity about how such a major technological upgrade to the financial system would play out.”

There is still a chance that private banking institutions will become the necessary intermediaries between CBDC platforms and consumers, although it will depend largely on the political will of the central banks. In that case, they could even profit from the new technology.

But no expert would deny the possible threat to the banks’ prosperity in a scenario where the central banks decide to take control.

And it’s not only a question of disintermediation in payments and transfers — what if the central banks decided to lend the money directly to customers?

“Theoretically, because central banks would have control over the CBDC ledger, they also could have access to one’s credit history and worthiness,” Neelakanti explained. In that case, user data could become so centralized that central banks could tailor interest rates to the individual customer’s credit-worthiness:

“There could be not a single Fed fund’s rate but rather a rate that is unique to each and every borrower in whichever country.”

Ralf Kubli, a board member at the Casper Network, was quick to disavow these fears, telling Cointelegraph, “Contrary to popular belief, CBDCs don’t offer much in the way of innovation beyond streamlined settlement.” 

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In Kubli’s analysis, central bank digital currencies are essentially just a digital form of settlement acting as a payment rail on top of another payment rail. Thus, they don’t reduce the need for labor or oversight. What they can do, however, is fuel the banks’ pace for innovation in the new competitive environment. A massive paradigm shift in finance is on the horizon, Kubli believes:

“To navigate the accelerating rate of change in our data-driven world, banks must embrace a digitally native approach to finance that incorporates blockchain’s transaction security, verifiability and enforceability.”

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USD-backed stablecoin pilot project launched by Pacific island nation of Palau

The Palau Stablecoin, or “Kluk,” will be minted on XRP Ledger using the Ripple CBDC Platform and will be distributed first to government employees.

The government of Palau is set to begin a pilot project for a United States dollar-backed stablecoin on July 26. The new coin will be issued on XRP Ledger.

The country will release the first Palau Stablecoins (PSCs) in the pilot project to government employees. This comes after several days of testing using volunteers to make purchases with various devices.

The PSC, nicknamed the Kluk, possibly due to its bird logo, is the latest project to run on the Ripple CBDC Platform that debuted in May. Ripple claimed at that time to be in talks with over 20 governments about central bank digital currency (CBDC) issuance. The agreement with Palau predates the new Ripple product, however. Ripple’s partnership with Palau was announced in 2021, with a target launch date in 2022.

The Kluk. Source: Twitter, Jay Hunter Anson

Palau is spread across a group of islands in the Oceania region of the Pacific Ocean. It has a population of slightly more than 18,000 and uses the U.S. dollar as its national currency.

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The country already has a digital residency program and issues ID supported by Cryptic Labs that is available as a nonfungible token on the Binance BNB blockchain. Palau’s Root Name System ID is valid for identification and Know Your Customer purposes and is recognized by several major international entities. It costs just over $20 per month.

Pacific island nations have been a hotbed of crypto development in recent years. For example, the Republic of the Marshall Islands is launching a CBDC and has legalized decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs). Vanuatu hosts the Satoshi Island “place for the crypto community to call home.” Tonga announced plans to introduce Bitcoin as legal tender, although it seems to have missed its planned January 2023 launch.

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Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Seeking ‘Crypto Architect’ for CBDC Project

Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Seeking ‘Crypto Architect’ for CBDC Project

The Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco is looking for a senior crypto architect to perform research and development relating to a central bank digital currency (CBDC). The Fed’s western regional bank posted a job ad for the position on LinkedIn and Indeed. “As part of the Federal Reserve’s mission to promote accessible, safe, and […]

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Wyoming seeks ‘stable token’ commission head in first steps to establish state stablecoin

The state seeks someone with connections and expertise in the blockchain industry, promising a $150,000 annual salary.

The United States state of Wyoming is beginning its work on its stablecoin, officially called the “stable token” project, by opening a job position for the head of the stable token commission. The executive will lead a team responsible for making a proper legislative framework for the project. 

The position was opened on the federal government’s website for civil jobs on July 20. The commission seeks to hire an executive director who would lead a team comprised of the Wyoming governor, state auditor, state treasurer and four “expert appointees.” The state is looking for someone with connections and expertise in the blockchain industry, promising a $150,000 annual salary.

The Wyoming Stable Token Act was introduced in February 2022, becoming law in March 2023. The act authorizes the issuance of a U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoin redeemable for fiat held in an account by the state.

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According to the text of the law, the stable token commission is responsible, among others, for deciding the overall number of tokens to be issued, concluding the requirements for redemption, and selecting the financial institutions to manage the tokens.

In April 2023, a similar initiative was proposed in the state of Texas, where lawmakers introduced bills for creating a state-based digital currency backed by gold. At the same time, several U.S. lawmakers have argued against the federal government’s interest in introducing a central bank digital currency.

Wyoming is a crypto-friendly jurisdiction. Recently, the state’s Governor, Mark Gordon, signed a bill preventing the forced disclosure of private keys to protect the privacy of digital asset owners. And in April, the state’s Attorney General Bridget Hill requested to intervene in the case between Custodia Bank and the Federal Reserve, seeking to defend its framework allowing certain crypto firms to qualify as state-chartered banks.

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Vladimir Putin Signs Off on Launch of Russia’s New CBDC Slated for 2025: Report

Vladimir Putin Signs Off on Launch of Russia’s New CBDC Slated for 2025: Report

Russian President Vladimir Putin has reportedly given the green light on a new central bank digital currency (CBDC) bill, allowing for the launch of a digital ruble. According to a new report by the Russian business publication Vedomosti, the bill Putin signed into law allows for the country’s central bank to test pilot the digital […]

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