ECB looking for consultant to support digital euro offline functionality
The European Central Bank (ECB) is looking for a senior payments industry expert to provide consultancy services on a 40% part-time basis to support the project team designing and developing the digital euro’s offline functionality. The successful candidate will support the team in (i) defining the deployment of the digital euro’s offline functionality in end users’ devices in line with the requirements set in the draft legislative proposal; (ii) designing and implementing an optimal user experience for offline contactless payments via smartphones; (iii) assessing how an offline digital euro can be integrated within the existing terminal landscape at the point of sale; (iv) supporting the drafting of detailed requirements for the digital euro’s offline functionality. [Read more at the ECB]
Bank of China launches e-CNY offline payments for Qingdao Rail Transit
The Qingdao branch of the Bank of China (BOC) has rolled out a new payment option for Qingdao Rail Transit through digital yuan hardware wallets for payments without network and electricity. This “deferred payment” system allows travelers to use the public transit service first and pay later with the hardware wallet featured enabled on users’ smartphones. This functionality requires the use of an Android-based smartphone running a “Super SIM” card that stores digital yuan account information for use when there’s no network or electricity, introduced by China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom in 2023. [Read more at Dazhong]
Japan’s first deposit-backed stablecoin “Tochika” has been launched
Hokkoku Bank together with the City of Suzu and Kono Shinkin Bank, has launched the “Suzu Tochika” deposit-backed blockchain-based stablecoin in Suzu City, Ishikawa Prefecture. In the summer of 2023, the consortium launched the “Suzu Tochituka” digital payment service for Suzu City-issued “Suzu Tochipo” points used for payments at participating stores. A Tochika account can be opened by registering a bank deposit account for charging the Tochituka app, with 1 tochika equating to 1 yen, and later redeemed at the same rate. Tochika is accepted at Tochituka member stores. Merchants pay a 0.5% settlement fee on Tochika transactions. [Read more on Norbert Gehrke’s Medium blog]
Decentralized finance (DeFi) leverage
The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) published a paper that examines decentralized finance (DeFi) leverage – ie the asset-to-equity ratio at the wallet level in major lending platforms. The overall leverage typically ranges between 1.4 and 1.9, while the largest and most active users consistently exhibit higher leverage than the rest. Leverage is mainly driven by loan-to-value requirements and borrowing costs, as well as crypto market price movements and sentiments. Higher wallet leverage generally undermines lending resilience, particularly increasing the share of outstanding debt close to being liquidated. Borrowers with high leverage are more likely to tilt towards volatile collateral when their debt positions are about to be liquidated. [Read more at the BIS]
Making sense of decentralized finance (DeFi)
The Philadelphia Fed published a paper that finds that DeFi has not decentralized decision-making power to users in the way its proponents had hoped. Decision-making power in DeFi remains highly concentrated in a few hands; insiders such as the founding team and venture capital funders often retain a substantial fraction of a platform’s tokens as compensation. Also, most small-scale users have little incentive to participate in votes on platform policies, since their votes are unlikely to influence the outcome. There may also be formal or informal barriers to small users’ participation. The paper concludes that future progress in DeFi will require not only technical advances in smart contract and distributed ledger design but also economic solutions to the governance problems faced by these platforms. [Read more at the Philly Fed]
Kiffmeister’s central bank digital currency monthly monitor
Just a reminder that I produce a monthly digest of central bank digital currency (CBDC) developments exclusively for the official sector. So (only) if you work at a central bank, ministry of finance or international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank) and who would like to receive it by email on the first business day of every month, please DM me on LinkedIn or email me at chronicles@kiffmeister.com
The Sovereign Official Digital Association (SODA) is a technology-agnostic firm offering advisory services at the intersection of central banking, digital finance and the web3 industry, aiming to make public digital money a reality. SODA believes institutions in the existing financial ecosystem should have access to the tools and resources they need to move from discussion to action. SODA offers ‘real life’ use cases to help test digital money and drive adoption as central banks and other public institutions explore the future of a more financially inclusive world powered by interoperable blockchain-based networks. SODA would love you to join us on this journey – please get in touch (chris@sodapublicmoney.org).
Satoshi Capital Advisors is a New York-based, global advisory firm that works with central banks, governments, and the private sector to architect, implement, and operate varying initiatives. Satoshi Capital Advisors’ central bank work revolves around CBDC architecture and implementation, providing advisory services from research phase through to growth phase. Utilizing a product-market fit and technology agnostic approach to CBDC architecture and implementation enables Satoshi Capital Advisors to build tailored solutions, bespoke to local financial system nuances. Satoshi Capital Advisors welcomes requests from central bank officials for virtual and in-person CBDC workshops. [Click here for more information]
WhisperCash offers the first fully offline digital currency platform that has the same properties as physical cash. It can perform secure consecutive offline payments without compromising on security, privacy or accessibility. WhisperCash allows direct person to person offline payments without any server infrastructure or internet connectivity. It comes in various form factors including the self-contained credit card-sized “Pro” that sports an eInk screen and capacitive keyboard, and lasts for two weeks between recharges assuming a few transactions per day. [Click here for more information]



