Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (02/28/2022)*

I’ve updated my tabulation of retail central bank digital currency (CBDC) explorers to include Uganda and update a few links.

Cecchetti and Schoenholtz Comments on Fed CBDC Paper

Steve Cecchetti and Kermit Schoenholtz responded to the 22 questions posed in the Fed’s central bank digital currency (CBDC) discussion paper. In general, they doubt that the benefits of a U.S. CBDC will exceed the risks, and that other, less risky, means are available to achieve all the key benefits that CBDC advocates anticipate. But if the Fed were to go ahead, they suggest that there should be no cap on individual holdings, to avoid a premium on CBDC (compared to other central bank liabilities) that would just redirect runs into close substitutes (such as Treasury bills).

Also, the Fed should expect to pay interest on CBDC because it would be politically unsustainable for the Fed to pay interest on wholesale digital liabilities without paying interest on retail digital liabilities. Also, not paying interest on CBDC would diminish its attractiveness relative to other safe, liquid instruments. Plus, that interest will be in part a mechanism to compensate the private intermediaries for performing the necessary services of creating and maintaining accounts, verifying identities, tracking assets, implementing transactions, and monitoring for suspicious activity.

They acknowledge that these would increase run risk in the private financial system, but in their view all of the benefits expected from issuing CBDCs can be achieved less disruptively, and they provide alternative mechanisms for five widely claimed benefits. They see two potential developments that could make a U.S. CBDC worthwhile; (i) if regulation of stablecoins prove politically infeasible (see their earlier post), or (ii) if other highly trustworthy financial jurisdictions (with convertible currencies, credible property rights protections, and free cross-border flow of capital) offer their own CBDC.

If the Fed does go ahead an issue CBDC, offline capability would add to its attractiveness. When the internet is not available, mobile telephony could provide a backup, and to facilitate everyday payments, small transactions also should be feasible offline, via Bluetooth or NFC links. [Read more]

Central Bank of Trinidad and Tobago to make decision on CBDC pilot by mid-year

The Central Bank of Trinidad and Tobago reportedly hopes to make a decision on a possible CBDC pilot by mid-year. The central bank’s  focus is on improving the payments system by promoting more widespread, safe and efficient electronic financial transactions. It is receiving IMF technical assistance, including on technical aspects and country experiences. [Read more]

Tracing the footprint of cryptoization in emerging market economies

This Bank for International Settlements (BIS) note provides estimates of the extent of “cryptoization” in emerging market economies (EMEs). In countries with volatile and/or depreciating exchange rates, holders of domestic fiat currencies have incentives to shift into reserve currency-pegged stablecoins, which conveniently help avoid capital controls and financial integrity requirements. The BIS note found that trading of US dollar-linked stablecoins vis-à-vis some EME currencies has soared since 2020, particularly against the Turkish lira and the Brazilian real. In addition, trading of risky crypto-assets, such as Bitcoin, also spiked in some EMEs facing depreciation pressure. [Read more]

The emerging autonomy-stability choice for stablecoins

This paper by Maarten van Oordt illustrates how fiat-backed/pegged stablecoin peg deviations may occur when the issuer doesn’t have reliable access to the traditional payment system of the jurisdiction that issues the relevant fiat currency. It suggests that national authorities could make stablecoin issuer access to payment systems conditional on submitting to regulatory controls. Stablecoin users would then face a choice between regulated stablecoins with a stable value but little autonomy, and alternative stablecoin arrangements with more autonomy but a less stable value. [Read more]

Jurisdictions Where Retail CBDC Is Being Explored (as of March 6, 2022)

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Jurisdictions Where Retail CBDC Is Being Explored (as of March 6, 2022)

Where central banks (CBs) have launched or piloted (or soon will)

Bahamas (launched)

Nigeria (pilot launched)

China (pilot launched)

Russia (pilot launched)

Eastern Caribbean (pilot launched)

Uruguay (pilot completed)

Jamaica (pilot completed; launch imminent)

 

Where CBs have done proofs of concepts (or soon will)

Bahrain (completed 2022)

Korea

Bhutan (planned)

New Zealand

Euro Area

Sweden

Japan (started)

Thailand

Ghana (started)

Turkey

Hungary (completed 2021)

Ukraine (completed 2019)

Iran (completed 2022)

United States (2022)

Kazakhstan (completed 2021)

 

Where CBs are in advanced stages of research and development

Canada (update)

Norway

Mauritius (update)

United Kingdom

Where CBs have explored or are exploring (with year of last update)

Australia (2021)

Morocco (2019)(update; 2022)

Brazil (2021)(update, 2021)

Nepal (2021)(update; 2022)

Chile (2021)

Oman (2022)

Curaçao en Sint Maarten (2018)

Pakistan (2021)

Czech Republic (2021)

Palestine (2021)(update; 2022)

Denmark (2017)

Peru (2019)(update; 2021)

Egypt (2022)

Philippines (2022)

Eswatini (2020)

Poland (2021)

Georgia (2021)(update; 2021)

Qatar (2022)

Haiti (Bitkòb)(2021)

Singapore (2021)(update, 2022)

Honduras (2021)

Saudi Arabia (2022)

Hong Kong SAR (2021)

South Africa (2021)

Iceland (2018)

Sudan (2022)

India (2021)(update; 2022)

Switzerland (2019)

Indonesia (2020)(update; 2021)

Taiwan (2020)(update; 2022)

Iraq (2022)

Trinidad & Tobago (2021)(update; 2022)

Israel (2021)(update; 2022)

Tunisia (2018)(update; 2022)

Kenya (2022)

Uganda (2022)

Lebanon (2020)(update; 2022)

Viet Nam (2021)

Kuwait (2019)(update; 2022)

Yemen (2022)

Madagascar (2021)

Zimbabwe (2022)

Malaysia (2021)

 

Where CBs have explored or are exploring (according to reputable sources)

Guatemala (2021)

Rwanda (2022)

Jordan (2022)

Tanzania (2021)

Laos (2021)

United Arab Emirates (2021)

Macau (2021)

Zambia (2022)

Mexico (2022)

 

Where CBs have launched and discontinued

Ecuador (2014-2018)(CBDC?)

Finland (1992-2006)

Sources: Central banks or various news sources per hyperlinks above, the Bank for International Settlements CBDC database and CBDCTracker.org.

Note: Retail CBDC is a broadly available general purpose digital payment instrument, denominated in the jurisdiction’s unit of account, that is a direct liability of the jurisdiction’s monetary authority. This table does not cover wholesale CBDC, which is limited to a set of predefined user groups, typically financial institutions.

Recent papers that focus on the practical aspects of CBDC issuance:

Kiff, J., J. Alwazir, S. Davidovic, A. Farias, A. Khan, T. Khiaonarong, M. Malaika, H.K. Monroe, N. Sugimoto, H. Tourpe, and P. Zhou. 2020. “A Survey of Research on Retail Central Bank Digital Currency,” IMF Working Paper No. 20/104.

Adrian, T., and T. Mancini-Griffoli. 2019a. “The Rise of Digital Money,” IMF Fintech Note 19/01.

Auer, R., J. Frost, L. Gambacorta, C. Monnet, T. Rice and H.S. Shin. 2021. “Central Bank Digital Currencies: Motives, Economic Implications and the Research Frontier,” Bank for International Settlements Working Paper No. 976, November.

Auer, R. and R. Boehme. 2021. “Central Bank Digital Currency: The Quest for Minimally Invasive Technology,” Bank for International Settlements Working Paper No. 948, June.

Bank for International Settlements. 2020. “Central Bank Digital Currencies: Foundational Principles and Core Features,” October.

Bank of England. 2020. “Central Bank Digital Currency: Opportunities, Challenges and Design,” Discussion Paper, March.

Bindseil, U. 2020. “Tiered CBDC and the Financial System,” European Central Bank Working Paper No. 2351, January.

Bossu, W., M. Itatani, C. Margulis, A. Rossi, H. Weenink and A. Yoshinaga. 2020. “Legal Aspects of Central Bank Digital Currency: Central Bank and Monetary Law Considerations,” IMF Working Paper No. 20/254.

Brookings Institution. 2020. "Design Choices for Central Bank Digital Currency: Policy and Technical Considerations," Global Economy & Development Working Paper 140, July.

European Central Bank. 2020. “Report on a Digital Euro,” October.

Niepelt, D. (ed.). 2021. Central Bank Digital Currency: Considerations, Projects and Outlook, Centre for Economic Policy Research, November.

Shah, D., R. Arora, H. Du, S. Darbha, J. Miedema, and C. Minwalla. 2020. “Technology Approach for a CBDC,” Bank of Canada Staff Analytical Note 2020-6.

Soderberg, Bechara, Bossu, Che, Davidovic, Kiff, Lukonga, Mancini-Griffoli, Sun and Yoshinaga. 2020. "Behind the Scenes of Central Bank Digital Currency," IMF FinTech Note No 2022/004.

Sveriges Riksbank. 2020. Economic Review: Second Special Issue on the E-Krona.

World Bank. 2021. “Central Bank Digital Currency: A Payments Perspective.”

World Economic Forum. 2020. Central Bank Digital Currency Policy-Maker Toolkit. And the WEF’s Ashley Lannquist maintains the ultimate CBDC reading list here!

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (02/27/2022)*

What’s the marketing strategy for the Fed’s CBDC?

JP Koning wonders whether the U.S. Fed has a central bank digital currency (CBDC) marketing pitch beyond that it is safer than other forms of money (“free from credit risk and liquidity risk”). He argues that “safe” is something that Americans already have with commercial bank money thanks to deposit insurance. And because the Fed is going with an “intermediated” model, users will still have to deal with (and probably pay fees to) the same old banks and other payment service providers. [Read more]

Central bank digital currencies risk becoming a gigantic flop

Peter Bofinger and Thomas Haas made a similar argument a year ago with respect to advanced economy countries more generally – i.e., where a large share of the population have access to government-insured bank accounts. However, they concede that a supranational CBDC with multi-currency operability and an openness to payment objects that are not system-specific, may be a worthwhile response to monopolistic or oligopolistic global retail payment networks such as PayPal. [Read more]

BOJ on track for digital currency roll-out

The Bank of Jamaica (BOJ) is reportedly still on track for the roll-out of its JAM-DEX central bank digital currency (CBDC) during the first quarter of 2022. The remaining steps include the passage of amendments to the Bank of Jamaica Act to make CBDC legal tender and the BOJ the sole issuer, and increasing the number of deposit-taking institutions onboarding clients. Also, launch awaits an independent third-party quality assurance assessment of the system, the results of which will be made public. [Read more]

New European Commission Data Act aims for more control over smart contracts

The European Commission has released its proposal for the union’s new Data Act. Among other things, it would mandate that applications using smart contracts include “internal functions which can reset or instruct the contract to stop or interrupt the operation to avoid future (accidental) executions.” Fears are being expressed that such “kill switches” could threaten the promise of immutability because, with the ability of a single source to make a change, the contract is no longer autonomous. [Read more]

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (02/25/2022)*

Sorry for the delay, but I was attending (and participating in) the excellent in-person Currency Research digital currency conference in Washington DC. (That’s me, second from the left in the photo below!)

It’s Time to Abandon the “Token vs. Account” Discussion

Celo’s Ezechiel Copic tears down the bogus distinction between “account-based” and “token-based” digital currency (DC), where ownership of the former is tied to identity, and the latter requires verifying the validity of the object used to pay. The distinction makes great sense in the physical currency world, but breaks down in the DC world, where blockchain-based DCs muddy the waters. A NY Fed article back in 2020 made similar points, but the bogus distinction persists! [Read more]

Digital Euro Consultancy Request for Proposals

The European Central Bank published a request for proposals for digital euro design and business model consultancy services. A pre-qualification phase will select 10 candidates to be invited to tender, after which five successful bidders will be awarded with a framework agreement. The total value of the contracts, excluding value-added taxes is EUR20,000,000. [Read more]

Ukrainian central bank suspends electronic cash transfers

The National Bank of Ukraine ordered electronic money (e-money) issuers to suspend the issuance of e-money and the replenishment of electronic wallets with e-money, as Russian forces lay siege across Ukraine. Other measures included suspending the foreign exchange market, limiting cash withdrawals and prohibiting the issuance of foreign currency from retail bank accounts. This has led to many Ukrainians reportedly turning to cryptocurrencies. [Read more]

Avanti Is Now Custodia, Announces Countdown to Launch in Q2

Wyoming-based Avanti Financial Group has changed its name to Custodia Bank, and announced plans to launch in Q2 with U.S. dollar deposit accounts for business customers, initially providing ACH and Fedwire services. Its post-launch roadmap includes digital asset custody, Avit™ (a payment instrument akin to a digital cashier’s check) and prime services, facilitated by customer-facing APIs to enable the programmability of payments by customers. [Read more]

* To get these updates sent to your inbox, please sign up here. Also, for those interested in intra-day updates and news that didn’t make the Daily Digest cut, please check out my Diigo fintech bookmarks: https://www.diigo.com/user/kiffmeister/Fintech.

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (02/24/2022)*

The Arab Monetary Fund issues practical CBDC guidance for Arab central banks

The Arab Monetary Fund (AMF) published a central bank digital currency (CBDC) to support Arab central banks exploring CBDCs that matches best each jurisdiction and their central bank’s objectives, available resources, and targeted implications. The framework takes into consideration country-specific conditions, infrastructure and as well as respective legal and regulatory frameworks. [Read more]

The AMF and UnionPay collaborate to support the growth of cross-border payments

The AMF and China’s UnionPay have signed a memorandum of understanding to establish cooperation and create interoperability between the AMF’s Buna cross-border and multi-currency payment system) and UnionPay. Buna and UnionPay will be connecting their payment systems to introduce to their network of participants, fast, efficient, and multi-currency cross-border payment solutions. [Read more]

* To get these updates sent to your inbox, please sign up here. Also, for those interested in intra-day updates and news that didn’t make the Daily Digest cut, please check out my Diigo fintech bookmarks: https://www.diigo.com/user/kiffmeister/Fintech.

In Q2 2022, the CBDCTT will launch the OpenCBDC Sandbox for evaluating, studying and learning from the OpenCBDC Boston Fed and the MIT Digital Currency Initiative open source CBDC platform. It will provide easy to use access, with the CBDCTT providing training and all updates. It’s available exclusively to central banks and official institutions. [Read more]

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (02/23/2022)*

Luna Foundation Guard raises $1 billion to form bitcoin reserve for UST stablecoin

The Luna Foundation Guard has raised $1 billion through an over-the-counter sale of LUNA, the native token of the Terra blockchain. Proceeds from the raise, one of the largest in the history of the crypto sector, will go towards establishing a bitcoin-denominated forex reserve for UST, Terra’s algorithmic US dollar-pegged stablecoin. [Read more]

* To get these updates sent to your inbox, please sign up here. Also, for those interested in intra-day updates and news that didn’t make the Daily Digest cut, please check out my Diigo fintech bookmarks: https://www.diigo.com/user/kiffmeister/Fintech.

In Q2 2022, the CBDCTT will launch the OpenCBDC Sandbox for evaluating, studying and learning from the OpenCBDC Boston Fed and the MIT Digital Currency Initiative open source CBDC platform. It will provide easy to use access, with the CBDCTT providing training and all updates. It’s available exclusively to central banks and official institutions. [Read more]

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (02/22/2022)*

Today’s Fintech Daily Digest includes Sweden’s e-krona central bank digital currency (CBDC) project entering a new proof-of-concept stage, and the Russian Finance Ministry submitting a new crypto regulation bill to parliament. Also, the Global Financial Markets Association (GSMA) has published a new report on wholesale CBDC.

Sweden’s E-krona project enters next phase

Sweden’s central bank has extended its contract with Accenture as supplier for its CBDC experimental project for a further year following the completion of Phase 2 technical trials. Phase 2 examined issues such as offline function, performance and integration of external participants, such as a bank, into the e-krona network. The conclusions from phase 2 will be presented in a report to be published in spring 2022. No decision has yet been taken on issuing an e-krona. [Read more]

A Bold Caribbean Experiment in E-Cash Hits a Major Obstacle

The Eastern Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB) DCash has been offline since January 14, and it could take several more days to fully restore service, bank officials told Bloomberg News. The “interruption” didn’t compromise any data but it stopped all transactions. The problem was related to an expiring certificate on the version of the Hyperledger Fabric that hosts the DCash ledger. [Read more]

Wholesale central bank digital currencies – a global capital markets perspective

A new Global Financial Markets Association paper identifies the key considerations for wholesale CBDC (wCBDC) success. It underscores the importance of interoperability with the broader financial market ecosystem, and recommends a cautious and measured approach to introduction to mitigate any potential transition risk impacting safety and soundness, and financial stability. [Read more]

Russia’s Ministry Of Finance Submits Bitcoin Bill Proposal

Russia’s Ministry of Finance has submitted a draft bill on crypto-asset regulation. Under it, crypto-assets are considered solely as an investment vehicle, and their use as a means of payment will be prohibited. It also includes user identification requirements, yearly investment limits, and custody arrangements (e.g., no self custody), includes detailed service provider requirements. [Read more]

* To get these updates sent to your inbox, please sign up here. Also, for those interested in intra-day updates and news that didn’t make the Daily Digest cut, please check out my Diigo fintech bookmarks: https://www.diigo.com/user/kiffmeister/Fintech.

In Q2 2022, the CBDCTT will launch the OpenCBDC Sandbox for evaluating, studying and learning from the OpenCBDC Boston Fed and the MIT Digital Currency Initiative open source CBDC platform. It will provide easy to use access, with the CBDCTT providing training and all updates. It’s available exclusively to central banks and official institutions. [Read more]

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (02/21/2022)*

IMF warns that eNaira may lead to new money-laundering and terrorism financing risks

IMF staff have warned the Central Bank of Nigeria that potential expansion of the use of the eNaira could lead to new money-laundering and terrorism financing risks. This expansion includes offline and cross-border payments, and interoperability with other central bank digital currency (CBDC). IMF staff also stressed the need to fix existing deficiencies in the AML/CFT framework which could exacerbate these risks. A recent Inter-Governmental Action Group against Money Laundering report identified significant deficiencies that could result in a FATF grey listing as early as next year. [Read more]

Uganda looks to Kenya, Jamaica for its digital currency

The Bank of Uganda is reportedly considering CBDC issuance, and exploring legal options for future amendments in financial laws that will facilitate it. Details are sketchy, and it’s not clear whether the central bank is considering retail or wholesale CBDC, or both, but it sounds like they’re focused on a blockchain-based and/or mobile money platforms. [Read more]

GoDaddy introduces QR codes for on-the-go transactions

GoDaddy has released a QR code technology for transaction processed by small and medium enterprises. It allows them to turn their mobile phones into terminals that accept online payments without requiring a terminal, dongle or card reader to process payments. A one-time personalized QR code is generated that customers can scan and then later pay, after which the code expires for improved security. [Read more]

* To get these updates sent to your inbox, please sign up here. Also, for those interested in intra-day updates and news that didn’t make the Daily Digest cut, please check out my Diigo fintech bookmarks: https://www.diigo.com/user/kiffmeister/Fintech.

Central Bank Digital Currency Workshop, Hosted by the CBDC Think Tank

In Q2 2022, the CBDCTT will launch the OpenCBDC Sandbox for evaluating, studying and learning from the OpenCBDC Boston Fed and the MIT Digital Currency Initiative open source CBDC platform. It will provide easy to use access, with the CBDCTT providing training and all updates. It’s available exclusively to central banks and official institutions. [Read more]

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (02/20/2022)*

Wyoming Lawmakers Want State to Launch Its Own Stablecoin

Wyoming lawmakers have proposed the Wyoming Stable Token Act (SF0106), which paves the way for the crypto-friendly state to launch its own dollar-pegged token. The act would allow Wyoming treasurer Curtis Meier Jr. to create a state stablecoin pegged to the U.S. dollar. The token would be redeemable for a single dollar held in trust by the state. [Read more]

OpenSea Confirms Phishing Attack Affecting Multiple Users

OpenSea is investigating a phishing attack aimed at users of its non-fungible token (NFT) platform. The hacker(s) stole several NFTs and had already sold a few for ethereum worth $1.7 million, according to CEO Devin Finzer. NFTs are blockchain-based deeds of ownership to different kinds of digital items, from expensive illustrations of apes to collectibles like celebrity autographs. [Read more]

Canadian Court Freezes Millions in Convoy Protestor Funds—Including Bitcoin

An Ontario Superior Court judge has issued an order to freeze millions of dollars in funds, including crypto-assets, as Ottawa’s convoy protests continue. The freezing order—known as a Mareva injunction—was part of a wider lawsuit filed against the convoy by the residents of Ottawa. The Canadian government is involved in an ongoing effort to seize protestors’ funds. [Read more]

However, it is impossible to freeze crypto-asset address and render it useless to the owner. The only way to do that is by using force to ultimately obtaining a crypto owner’s private keys. This is why fundraisers, like Nunchuk, utilize multi-signature controls. Basically, people worried about getting their crypto funds frozen should not keep crypto on centralized platforms. [Read more]

Judge orders Terraform Labs to comply with SEC subpoenas

A judge in the Southern District of New York has granted a US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) application for an order requiring Terraform Labs to comply with investigative subpoenas. The SEC is investigating whether Terraform Labs had violated US securities laws with its Mirror Protocol, a platform which creates crypto-assets for users to buy and sell popular stocks. [Read more]

UAE Prepares to Launch Nationwide Crypto Licensing System

The United Arab Emirates Securities and Commodities Authority (SCA) is reportedly getting ready to start issuing federal licenses to cryptocurrency service providers in the first quarter. The SCA will regulate the crypto industry with input from the central bank, but local financial centers can establish their own daily procedures around licensing. [Read more]

* To get these updates sent to your inbox, please sign up here. Also, for those interested in intra-day updates and news that didn’t make the Daily Digest cut, please check out my Diigo fintech bookmarks: https://www.diigo.com/user/kiffmeister/Fintech.

Central Bank Digital Currency Workshop, Hosted by the CBDC Think Tank

In Q2 2022, the CBDCTT will launch the OpenCBDC Sandbox for evaluating, studying and learning from the OpenCBDC Boston Fed and the MIT Digital Currency Initiative open source CBDC platform. It will provide easy to use access, with the CBDCTT providing training and all updates. It’s available exclusively to central banks and official institutions. [Read more]