Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20240530)

Spain’s central bank launches second wholesale CBDC trial

Banco de España has launched a second wholesale central bank digital currency (CBDC) trial, this time to test the settlement of natively digital bond transactions, and make coupon and redemption payments. The first trial, announced in January, included developing a tokenized deposit solution for interbank payments, and settling tokenized securities (i.e., not natively digital) transactions. [Read more on the Spanish government’s Boletín Oficial del Estado]

CBDC initiatives of the Bank of Japan (7th CBDC Forum)

The Bank of Japan (BOJ) held its seventh “CBDC Forum” and published the secretariat’s presentation, which Norbert Gehrke kindly summarized in English. The presentation outlines the BOJ’s stance on CBDC, delves into the specifics of the proof-of-concept work currently underway, and elaborates on the structure and activities of the CBDC Forum, which involves private sector stakeholders. [View the presentation at the BOJ and read Norbert’s summary on Medium]

The day prior (May 28, 2024) the Japanese Ministry of Finance (MOF) hosted the ninth meeting of its CBDC Experts working group, at which BOJ staff gave the same presentation they gave at their CBDC Forum. Also discussed at the MOF meeting was a presentation by MOF staff on the status of CBDC-related discussions with relevant government ministries and agencies. [View the presentation at the MOF]

PayPal’s new stablecoin on Solana will offer ‘confidential transfers’

PayPal’s PYUSD stablecoin, which previously had only been available on Ethereum, has been deployed on Solana which offers “confidential transfers” as an optional feature. When enabled, it would allow merchants to provide confidentiality for transaction amounts to their consumers while maintaining visibility for regulatory purposes. According to PayPal, it chose the Solana blockchain for its high speeds with extremely low costs. [Read more at PayPal and Solana]

Telegram Wallet enforces new KYC rules, switches provider

Wallet, a third-party cryptocurrency wallet app on Telegram, will impose stricter know your customer (KYC) rules to access all features. Before the update, users did not need to complete any KYC, but they will have to provide their name, birthdate and phone number for “basic” transaction limit levels (see below). “Extended” access will require the user’s national identification, and providing the residential address remove all transfer limits. [Read more at Wallet]

Cambodia digital payments to nurture local currency

According to National Bank of Cambodia Governor Chea Serey, cross-border QR code payments made through Cambodia’s Bakong digital payment system are set to boost the use of the nation’s riel currency. Bakong can already be used for QR code-based payments between Cambodia, Thailand, Laos and Vietnam, and those involving China’s UnionPay. These cross-border payments can only be carried out in riel, so Cambodian citizens need to have a riel Bakong account to make payments in Thailand, for example, while Thai tourists can only make QR code transactions in Cambodia if the place where they are shopping accepts riel. The central bank plans to enable cross-border payments using Bakong with India as early as June and is also working with Japan. [Read more at Nikkei Asia]

Upcoming Speaking Engagements:

  • CBDC Conference, Istanbul, September 10-12. The conference will offer representatives of central banks, commercial banks, technology providers, policy makers and academics the perfect platform to learn about the latest CBDC developments, exchange ideas with experts and peers. [Find out more and register here][Central bank delegates may be eligible for free registration (email registration@cbdc-conference.com to find out more)]
  • Digital Currency Conference, London, September 23-24. The conference will bring together policymakers, regulators, and technology and innovation experts to network and discuss all aspects of digital currencies. And enter the KiffmeisterDCC code at registration to get a 20% discount! [Find out more and register here]

And 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 john@kiffmeister.com.

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20240520)

Impact of Retail CBDC on Digital Payments and Bank Deposits: Evidence from India

The U.S. National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) published an empirical analysis utilizing detailed transaction data from India’s digital rupee pilot to explore the dynamics between central bank digital currency (CBDC) and existing digital payment methods, as well as the implications of increased CBDC usage on traditional bank deposits. It found that the April 2023 introduction of merchant fees on certain Unified Payments Interface (UPI) person-to-merchant (P2M) payments catalyzed a substitution effect into digital rupees. Furthermore, it found that an uptick in CBDC usage was associated with a notable decline in bank, cash, and savings deposits. [Read more at the NBER]

Nothing to hide? Gender and age differences in the willingness to share data

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) published a paper that, based on a representative survey of about 1,300 US consumers, found that women are less willing than men to share their financial transaction data in exchange for better offers on financial services. Differences in attitudes across groups, such as the willingness to take financial risks, concerns that data will become publicly available and concerns around personal safety, explain part of these gaps. The analysis also shows that older individuals are also less willing to share their data, perhaps as a matter of principle. This could result in biased samples and outcomes that are not in the interest of the underrepresented groups, e.g. in lending decisions, financial advice, and health applications. [Read more at the BIS]

Upcoming Speaking Engagements:

  • CBDC Conference, Istanbul, September 10-12. The conference will offer representatives of central banks, commercial banks, technology providers, policy makers and academics the perfect platform to learn about the latest CBDC developments, exchange ideas with experts and peers. [Find out more and register here][Central bank delegates may be eligible for free registration (email registration@cbdc-conference.com to find out more)]
  • Digital Currency Conference, London, September 23-24. The conference will bring together policymakers, regulators, and technology and innovation experts to network and discuss all aspects of digital currencies. And enter the KiffmeisterDCC code at registration to get a 20% discount! [Find out more and register here]

And 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 john@kiffmeister.com.

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20240317)*

FYI I publish a weekly digest of all of my central bank digital currency (CBDC) related posts, although you don’t need to look at it if you follow this Daily Digest every day. However, you might find it useful if you skipped a few editions. [See the Weekly CBDC Digest here]. Also, if you want some deeper weekly CBDC dives check out Richard Turrin’s Cashless Blog [here] and Conrad Kraft’s CBDC Chronicles [here]. Also, Guneet Kaur’s Bi-Weekly CBDCs Express looks promising [here].

CBDC governance: programmability, privacy and policies

Canada’s Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI) Digital Policy Hub published a paper by Ori Freiman on central bank digital currency (CBDC) governance, focusing particularly on programmability and privacy/surveillance. Although programmable money and payments can support social policies, they also raise questions about the authorities’ influence and control, and how to ensure there is no abuse of power. Privacy is a significant CBDC design challenge because meeting financial integrity (e.g., AML/CFT) requirements while offering cash-like anonymity seems incompatible. Authorities’ access to user data could lead to state-level surveillance, threatening civil liberties and human rights. Even if safeguards are put in place, CBDC infrastructure could be changed and initial safeguards overridden, rendering this risk a time-consistency problem. Eleven policy recommendations are suggested on privacy and data rights, accessibility, public participation and oversight, prohibiting programmable money, legislation protecting cash and more. [Read more at CIGI]

*For those interested in intra-day updates, check out my searchable Diigo Fintech developments database, which is also a good place to go to query for past developments: https://www.diigo.com/user/kiffmeister/ART.

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]

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20240308)*

Project Aurum 2.0: Improving privacy for retail CBDC payment

The BIS Innovation Hub and the Hong Kong Monetary Authority have launched the second phase of Project Aurum. Phase 1.0 tested the feasibility of a technological stack that integrates a wholesale interbank system and a retail e-wallet. Phase 2.0 will now focus on how to enhance privacy for retail central bank digital currencies (CBDC). It will explore several privacy-enhancing technologies, including pseudonymization and zero knowledge proofs, and test how increasing privacy affects the performance and compliance of a system. [Read more at the BIS]

Powell says Fed not “remotely close” to a central bank digital currency

Chairman Jerome Powell, testifying before the Senate Banking Committee on March 7, 2024, said the U.S. Federal Reserve was “nowhere near” issuing a CBDC. He added that it has no interest in establishing accounts for individuals that would compete with the banking system, and it would not support any Fed monitoring of personal financial transactions. [Read more at Reuters]

CFTC digital asset classification approach and taxonomy

The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) Global Markets Advisory Committee (GMAC) Digital Assets Subcommittee has proposed a new digital asset classification approach and taxonomy. It defines a digital asset in a technology agnostic manner, with the Subcommittee noting that the type of database or network should not be part of the classification to avoid “unintended consequences for the application of market regulations.” [Read more at the CFTC]

Digital Asset: a controllable electronic record, where one or more parties can exclusively exercise control through transfer of this record and where the controllable electronic record itself is uniquely identifiable. Excluded from the definition are those controllable electronic records that exist in and function solely as part of a financial institution’s books and records.

*For those interested in intra-day updates, check out my searchable Diigo Fintech developments database, which is also a good place to go to query for past developments: https://www.diigo.com/user/kiffmeister/ART.

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]

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20240103)*

Calls for applications for digital euro component providers

The European Central Bank (ECB) has issued five calls for applications to establish framework agreements with potential providers of digital euro components and related services. At this stage the ECB is not making a commitment to launch any of the development work listed in the calls for applications. The purpose of the selection process is to establish framework agreements with the most suitable external providers to ensure that the Eurosystem is prepared to start developing a digital euro in the future if warranted. [Read more at the ECB]

What London’s Oyster cards reveal about central bank digital currencies

According to Martin C W Walker, privacy fears may not turn out to be the greatest obstacle to the rollout of retail central bank digital currencies (CBDCs). What if the simple inconvenience of using CBDC is enough to stop widespread adoption? The evidence from Transport for London (TfL), the body that controls London’s public transport, suggests that convenience is a very powerful force in retail payments. Having to top up an Oyster pay-as-you-go card is considerably less convenient than paying directly from a bank account (via a debit card) or using a credit card. So who would bother to top up the CBDC wallet to pay for things for which they could already use their credit or debit cards? [Read more at the LSE Business Review blog]

Oyster pay-as-you-go vs contactless, total journeys (number of journeys per four-week period)

FYI here are some of my upcoming speaking engagements:

Digital Euro Conference 2024 (Frankfurt on February 29)[Register here]

*For those interested in intra-day updates, check out my searchable Diigo Fintech developments database, which is also a good place to go to query for past developments: https://www.diigo.com/user/kiffmeister/ART.

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]

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20231222)*

The role of privacy-enhancing and -preserving technologies in the digital age

The Centre for Information Policy Leadership at Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP (CIPL) released a white paper on privacy-enhancing and privacy-preserving technologies. The paper explores how organizations are approaching privacy-enhancing technologies (“PETs”) and how PETs can advance data protection principles, and provides examples of how specific types of PETs work. It also explores potential challenges to the use of PETs and possible solutions to those challenges. [Read more at the CIPL]

Bank of China in landmark cross-border digital yuan transactions

This month (December 2023) the Bank of China was involved in a couple of landmark cross-border digital yuan transactions. Its Hong Kong branch served as an intermediary for the settlement of a $3.4 million bulk commodity payment between Baosteel Group and Bao-trans Enterprises, and its Shanghai branch completed a $14 million precious metal settlement with the Shanghai Gold Exchange, both transactions in digital yuan. [Read more in The Standard and the Shanghai Securities Journal]

FYI here are some of my upcoming speaking engagements:

– Digital Euro Conference 2024 (Frankfurt on February 29)[Register here]

*For those interested in intra-day updates, check out my searchable Diigo Fintech developments database, which is also a good place to go to query for past developments: https://www.diigo.com/user/kiffmeister/ART.

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]

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20231119)*

CBDC and privacy: A randomized survey experiment

A Bank for International Settlements (BIS) study found privacy-preserving variations of central bank digital currency (CBDC) design have significant effects on willingness to use CBDC to purchase privacy-sensitive products (e.g., psychiatric services and adult products). It was based on a survey of a nationally representative sample of over 3,500 Korean participants. The willingness to use CBDC substantially increases with the provision of information about the privacy benefits of using it. Finally, these effects vary with respondents’ trust in public or private institutions with regard to privacy protection and their demographic characteristics. [Read more at the BIS]

The BIS paper does, however, express some caution about generalizing its findings over time and across countries with different institutional settings and political climates. For instance, with regard to which institution is to safeguard personal data, trust in institutions varies with countries. According to a [2020] US survey, American consumers have more trust in traditional financial institutions than government agencies and Bigtech companies, whereas the respondents in Korean survey show more trust in the government than financial institutions and Bigtech companies. [Read more about the US 2020 survey at the BIS]

Meeting the need for higher privacy in CBDC transactions

The current draft of the digital euro legislation calls for increased privacy for close-proximity offline payments, which is seen as consistent with the European Union AML/CFT framework risk-based approach. The European Data Protection Board (EDPB) and European Data Protection Supervisor (EDPS) suggest increased privacy for low-value online payments too, but not as private as offline transactions, because online transactions would not be limited to proximity payments, resulting in a potentially attractive model for criminals. Hence, they recommend transaction size limits above which complete checks can occur that are lower for online than offline transactions. However, Atakan Kavuklu suggests equalizing the limits at the higher level for all low-value proximity payments (e.g., those using NFC and Bluetooth connections). He believes this could benefit the acceptance and success of a digital euro. [Read more on LinkedIn]

CBDC and bank disintermediation in a portfolio choice model

The IMF published a paper that develops a model to determine the conditions in which the introduction of an interest-bearing CBDC would lead to lower deposits and lending in the banking sector. It finds that richer households increase their holdings of deposits as banks increase deposit interest rates in reaction to the CBDC introduction, which is offset by poorer households switching from deposits to the CBDC. Total deposits are more likely to fall when the mass of poorer households is large and when it is relatively costly to access bank accounts, which tends to be the case in emerging market and developing economy countries. However, even then the impact on lending is quantitatively small if banks have access to other forms of funding, such as wholesale or central bank financing. [Read more at the IMF]

CBDCs: A lesson in the power to disobey

R3’s Jack Fletcher does a nice dismantling of the dystopian case against central bank digital currency (CBDC). First he points out that there are technical solutions to privacy available through distributed ledger technology (DLT) infrastructure that far surpass anything that is available in existing digital solutions, so a CBDC could be as private as cash. Secondly, in a world of payment options, why would anyone use a surveillance CBDC when they could simply use Visa or Mastercard or cash instead? And access to cash is something that no government or central bank is keen to remove. Indeed, they must now step in as consumer preferences drive it to redundancy. But with cash use declining as a global trend, Jack does acknowledge that society must consider a future world whereby it no longer exists and our privacy and our freedom to disobey is removed with it. [Read more on the Tabb Forum]

Mobile money, perception about cash, and financial inclusion

The IMF published a paper that explores survey data for Uganda to compare mobile money users and non-users across a range of indicators that capture individuals’ perceptions about cash, and the extent to which they remit, save, and borrow money. It finds that mobile money users, compared to non-users, are more likely to perceive cash as risky and less likely to prefer carrying large amounts of cash. It also confirms that mobile money users are more likely to receive and send remittances, save, and borrow. They also save and borrow larger amounts. This suggests that the rapid expansion of fintech in Africa is likely to reduce the demand for and usage of cash. [Read more at the IMF]

Is Fintech eating the banks’ lunches?

The IMF published a paper that examines how the growing presence of Fintech firms affects the performance of traditional financial institutions. The findings point to a negative impact on profitability, primarily due to a reduction in interest income and a rise in operational costs. Although established financial institutions have tried to diversify their revenue streams, these efforts have proven inadequate to offset the losses associated with increased competition from Fintech firms. The study also reveals that various Fintech business models, such as peer-to-peer (P2P) lending and balance sheet lending, have varying effects on financial institutions. Cooperative banks experience more significant profit deterioration under both models, whereas (larger) commercial banks appear to benefit from partnerships with P2P platforms, as evidenced by an increase in non-interest income. Furthermore, the findings suggest that Fintech presence has a disproportionately larger adverse effect on banks in countries with more competitive, profitable, and developed financial systems. Interestingly, however, traditional financial institutions in countries with stronger regulatory frameworks appear to benefit from the expanding influence of Fintech firms. [Read more at the IMF]

FYI here are some of my upcoming speaking engagements:

– Currency Research Americas Cash Cycle & Payments Seminar (Orlando Florida on November 27-30)[Register here]

– Digital Euro Conference 2024 (Frankfurt on February 29)[Register here]

*For those interested in intra-day updates, check out my searchable Diigo Fintech developments database, which is also a good place to go to query for past developments: https://www.diigo.com/user/kiffmeister/ART.

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]

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20231018)*

Eurosystem proceeds to next phase of digital euro project

The European Central Bank (ECB) digital euro project will move to the “preparation” phase on November 1, 2023, with the completion of the “investigation” phase launched in October 2021. Based on the findings from this phase, a digital euro would be widely accessible, free for basic use and available online and offline. It would offer the highest level of privacy and allow users to settle payments instantly in central bank money. It could be used from person to person, at the point of sale, in e-commerce and in government transactions. The preparation phase will initially last two years, and involve finalizing the digital euro rulebook and selecting providers that could develop a digital euro platform and infrastructure. It will also include testing and experimentation. [Read more at the ECB including the investigation phase report]

Digital euro: ensuring the highest data protection and privacy standards

The European Data Protection Board (EDPB) and the European Data Protection Supervisor recommended changes to European Union (EU) draft legislation for a digital euro in order to boost privacy standards. They “strongly recommend” a “privacy threshold” for online transactions so that neither offline nor online low-value transactions are traced for financial integrity purposes. They also question the need for a single access point to verify that the amount of digital euros held by each user does not exceed the maximum amount allowed, arguing that “technical measures allowing for a decentralized storage of these identifiers are feasible, as an alternative”. [Read more at the EDPB]

ECB launches pre-call for wholesale CBDC trial participation

The ECB has launched a survey targeting potential participants in its trials and experiments for central bank money settlement of wholesale financial transactions recorded on distributed ledger technology (DLT) platforms. The plan is to test three settlement solutions, including two that link to existing euro payment systems (from the central banks of Germany and Italy) and one wholesale central bank digital currency (CBDC) developed by the Banque de France. [Read more at the ECB]

CPMI sets out harmonized ISO 20022 data requirements

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures (CPMI) published harmonized ISO 20022 data requirements that establish a consistent minimum set of messaging standards for more efficient processing of cross-border payments. They will facilitate the straight through processing of end-to-end payments, making them faster and more reliable. The CPMI will continue its engagement with payment system operators and financial institutions to foster the implementation of the harmonized data requirements by end-2027. [Read more at the BIS]

Linking fast payment systems across borders

The CPMI published a consultative report on initial considerations on governance and oversight for fast payment system (FPS) interlinking, one of the most promising solutions for enhancing cross-border payments. However, agreeing on workable governance and oversight arrangements can be especially challenging due to the multi-jurisdictional, cross-border and/or cross-currency nature of these arrangements. The interim report describes 10 initial considerations, resulting from a series of workshops with global stakeholders that was undertaken by the CPMI to better understand the sensitivities, complexities and experiences in this area. [Read more at the BIS]

*For those interested in intra-day updates, check out my searchable Diigo Fintech developments database, which is also a good place to go to query for past developments: https://www.diigo.com/user/kiffmeister/ART.

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]

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20230921)*

Emmer’s CBDC Anti-Surveillance State Act passes Financial Services Committee

The US House Financial Services Committee considered Majority Whip Tom Emmer’s CBDC Anti-Surveillance State Act. The bill was passed out of the Committee and reported favorably to the House floor during the markup session, an important step toward passing this legislation through Congress. The Act would prevent the Federal Reserve from issuing a central bank digital currency (CBDC) directly or indirectly to individuals or maintaining accounts on behalf of individuals. It would also prohibit the Secretary of the Treasury from directing the Federal Reserve to issue a CBDC and clarifies that a CBDC can only be issued pursuant to congressional authorization. [Read more on Emmer’s website]

Interestingly, Emmer’s bill does leave the door open for a privacy-preserving digital currency: “this Act and the amendments made by this Act shall not apply to any dollar-denominated currency that is open, permissionless, and private, and fully preserves the privacy protections of United States coins and physical currency.” That could leave the door open for House Representative Stephen Lynch’s ECASH Act that would direct the Secretary of the Treasury (not the Federal Reserve) to develop and pilot digital dollar technologies that replicate the privacy-respecting features of physical cash. [Read the ECASH Act here and the FAQ here]

JP Morgan is part of Regulated Liability Network digital currency project

JP Morgan is participating in the Regulated Liability Network (RLN). Earlier in September 2023, the UK arm of the RLN shared the findings of its latest work without mentioning the participants. The network aims to bring together banks and central banks to support different types of digital currency on the same network. That includes CBDCs, deposit tokens and regulated stablecoins. In July the US RLN published a report involving several other U.S. banks, the New York Federal Reserve’s innovation arm and Mastercard. The premise that underpins the RLN is interoperability so that banks don’t need to use the same type of blockchain to transfer tokens between them. [Read more at Ledger Insights]

R3 lays off a fifth of its employees

R3 has laid off a fifth of its employees as part of cost-cutting drive, blaming tough economic conditions that it says have led the company to shift its focus and business model. According to Bloomberg, the company had laid off just over a fifth of its headcount, affecting the company’s operations globally and across different functions. R3 is based in New York but operates an office in the United Kingdom. While enterprise blockchain technology has gained traction over the years, it remains a slow-moving industry where projects take years. However, these projects have moved slowly while others have been abandoned, leading to lost revenue for R3. [Read more at R3]

PayPal USD (PYUSD) is now available on Venmo

PayPal’s PYUSD dollar-denominated stablecoin is now available on Venmo to select users and will be rolling out fully in the coming weeks. Transfers between PayPal and Venmo users are fast and free, and individuals using compatible external wallets, and merchants accepting payments in PYUSD, will also be able to receive transfers from Venmo users (blockchain network fees apply). Also, PYUSD has been greenlisted by the New York State Department of Financial Services, making it easier for virtual currency entities licensed in New York to support PYUSD. [Read more at PayPal]

BIS and IADB join forces to foster LATAM innovation and financial inclusion

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) and the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) are joining forces to explore and develop technology that can help to modernize Latin American and the Caribbean financial systems . The first collaboration will be on Project FuSSE (Fully Scalable Settlement Engine) aiming to design and test backend functionality that can be adapted to multiple types of infrastructures, allowing them to process a growing number of transactions and participants across various types of assets and the number of participants. The technology could support payment systems, security settlement systems or even CBDCs. [Read more at the BIS]


*For those interested in intra-day updates, check out my searchable Diigo Fintech developments database, which is also a good place to go to query for past developments: https://www.diigo.com/user/kiffmeister/ART.

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]

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20230906)*

Blockchain privacy and regulatory compliance: towards a practical equilibrium

Ethereum’s Vitalik Buterin has co-authored a paper on a smart contract-based protocol designed to reconcile financial privacy with regulatory compliance. The core idea is to allow users to publish a zero-knowledge proof, demonstrating that their funds (do not) originate from known (un-)lawful sources, without publicly revealing their entire transaction transaction history. This is achieved by proving membership in custom association sets (“privacy pools”) that satisfy certain properties, required by regulation or social consensus.  [Read more on SSRN]

Bank of Canada explores impact of quantum computing on CBDCs

The Bank of Canada has engaged evolutionQ for a research project involving quantum-safe cybersecurity technologies for greenfield digital currencies. The Bank of Canada is exploring technologies and technical ecosystems that may inform decisions relating to the development of a potential digital loonie. The evolutionQ research will explore the impact of integrating quantum-safe encryption methods and crypto-agility as design goals for central bank digital currency (CBDC). The code developed during the research will be released as open source to give developers and researchers the opportunity to explore the new cryptographic methods.  [Read more at evolutionQ]


*For those interested in intra-day updates, check out my searchable Diigo Fintech developments database, which is also a good place to go to query for past developments: https://www.diigo.com/user/kiffmeister/ART.

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]