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John Kiff

Rwanda central bank launches CBDC public consultation - 0 views

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    The National Bank of Rwanda (NBR) launched a public consultation on the potential issuance of central bank digital currency (CBDC). A detailed feasibility study, launched in 2023, formed the basis of its approach, that identified four "sweet spots" for a Rwandan CBDC: (i) increase resilience against possible network outages, power failures and natural disasters, (ii) improve innovation and competition, (iii) contribute to achieving the cashless economy national initiative over time, and (iv)develop faster, cheaper, more transparent, and more inclusive crossborder remittances. The consultative paper recommends a cautious iterative approach with multiple proofs of concepts and pilots.
John Kiff

IBM World wire - the inevitable rise of Centralized Blockchains - Daily Fintech - 0 views

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    IBM World wire focuses on the cross-border payments market with enabled payment locations in 72 countries, 48 currencies and 44 banking endpoints. It supports Stellar Lumens and a USD based stablecoin - thanks to their work with Stronghold. The network will also support stablecoins issued by several of its consortium banks.
John Kiff

Send money internationally for free via Coinbase - 0 views

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    Coinbase customers can now transfer funds to any user with a Coinbase account around the world using XRP and USDCoin with no fee. The development enables users to send and receive money instantly, as well as convert them into local currency.
John Kiff

Aa Traditional Remittance Rates Soar, Crypto-Baaed Transfers Can Cut Costs in Africa by... - 0 views

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    On average, it costs 9.3% to send the equivalent of $200 to the Africa according to a new World Bank report. However, the cost drops by as much as 90% when money is sent through cryptocurrency-based fintech companies like Bitpesa.
John Kiff

The cost of cross-border payments needs to drop - 0 views

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    In the long run the answer to the high cost of remittances is a shift away from expensive cash-based systems and a bypassing of banks and transfer firms altogether.
John Kiff

IBM Signs 6 Banks to Issue Stablecoins and Use Stellar's XLM Cryptocurrency - CoinDesk - 0 views

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    Six international banks have signed letters of intent to issue fiat-backed stablecoins on World Wire, an IBM payment network that uses the Stellar public blockchain. The network promises to let regulated institutions move value across borders more quickly and cheaply than the legacy correspondent banking system.
John Kiff

IBM launches challenge to Ripple and Swift | American Banker - 0 views

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    The choice of Stellar is a bit surprising given that IBM has been working with the Linux Foundation on Hyperledger Fabric for years. But Hyperledger Fabric is permissioned, private distributed-ledger technology. IBM wanted something more open that any organization could join if it met certain criteria. In World Wire, IBM has created kind of a virtual private network within Stellar. Organizations can register assets and become part of the network, but IBM carefully vets each participant and validator. By contrast, Ripple says it does not know who runs the validator nodes on its distributed ledger. It's really about knowing the validators, but without creating this walled garden that you have to have special permission to join.
John Kiff

Banks Consider Following JPMorgan Into Digital Currency, IBM Says - Bloomberg - 0 views

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    IBM said at least two major U.S. banks are considering whether to follow JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s lead in issuing a stablecoin. IBM said it is also working with six non-U.S. banks on digital currencies, including BNK Financial Group Inc.'s Busan Bank in South Korea, and in the Philippines, Rizal Commercial Banking Corp., which is expected to issue a stablecoin in the second quarter. The banks are awaiting approvals from regulators.
John Kiff

Central Banks of Canada and Singapore conduct successful experiment for cross border pa... - 0 views

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    The BoC and MAS linked up their respective blockchain projects, Jasper and Ubin, which are built on R3's Corda and JPMorgan's Quorum platforms, respectively. They connected using hashed time-locked contracts that allowed direct PvP settlement without the use of an intermediary.
John Kiff

Cross-Border Business Blockchain platform by SAFE of China - 0 views

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    The State Administration of Foreign Exchange of China has collaborated with ZhongChao Credit Card Industry Development Co., Ltd, a state-owned monopoly enterprise to built a blockchain-based cross-border financial trade service platform.
John Kiff

Ripple Partners with Ria Money Transfer to Power Instant Global Payments - 0 views

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    Ria Money Transfer has joined the RippleNet blockchain-based global payments network. Ria is one of the largest payment service providers in the world, With customers in over 155 countries, and $40 billion in money transfer volume per year.
John Kiff

Fintech Can Cut Costs of Remittances to Latin America - 0 views

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    For Latin Americans living abroad sending money back home via traditional banking methods and money transfer operators can be a complicated and costly ordeal. More cost-effective approaches rely on using fintech, like mobile banking, according to a recent IMF working paper.
John Kiff

BOJ and ECB joint report on distributed ledger technology - 0 views

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    The ECB and BoJ published the outcome of Poject Stella, their joint research on DLT-based synchronised cross-border payments system. It concludes that the safety of today's cross-border payments could potentially be improved by using payment methods that synchronise payments and lock funds along the payment chain, but further reflections on legal and compliance issues, the maturity of the technology and a cost-benefit analysis would be required before the possible implementation of such new methods could be considered.
John Kiff

Swift says Singapore trial cut cross-border payment times - 0 views

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    SWIFT has concluded a trial to integrate its "global payment initiative" with Singapore's Fast And Secure Transfers (FAST) domestic instant payment service, that linked 17 banks across seven countries. It said all payments in the trial were settled within between 13 and 25 seconds.
John Kiff

Swift bullish on future of cross-border payments - 0 views

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    Global payment services provider Swift has said that its new cross-border payments platform is coping with greater consumer demand for speed and transparency. Swift launched its global payments initiative, or GPI, in 2017, in an attempt to speed up cross-border payments systems.
John Kiff

PayPal Expands its Money Transfer Service Xoom to 32 European Markets including Germany... - 0 views

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    PayPal launched Xoom-its international money transfer service-in 32 markets across Europe.
John Kiff

SWIFT's Battle For International Payments - 0 views

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    Perhaps the most useful thing that disruptive technologies such as cryptocurrencies have done is to kick existing payments providers out of their complacency. Two days after Facebook announced its One Cryptocurrency To Rule Them All, the international messaging service SWIFT announced its own plan for world domination.
John Kiff

Mastercard and P27 to launch Nordic real-time payments system - 0 views

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    Mastercard has teamed up with P27 Nordic Payments Platform to deliver fast, cross-border, multi-currency account to account payments across the Nordic region. The partners claim this is a world first in terms of a real-time and batch multi-currency platform, which will offer immediate payments with lower costs, higher security and increased competitiveness. P27 Nordic Payments Platform is owned by Danske Bank, Handelsbanken, Nordea, OP Financial Group, SEB and Swedbank.
John Kiff

Can Facebook Help Reduce the Cost of Remittances? - 0 views

  • Remittance Costs Can Facebook Help Reduce the Cost of Remittances? by Felix Richter,   Jun 20, 2019 Financial market in Africa Having successfully connected large parts of the world through its social media and messaging platforms, Facebook is now taking on a new project: creating a “more inclusive global financial system”. The world’s largest social media company introduced a new cryptocurrency named Libra this week, which will be run by the Libra Association, an independent, non-profit organization based in Geneva, Switzerland, whose founding members include companies such as Mastercard, Visa, eBay, Uber, Spotify, Vodafone and, of course, Facebook itself, among others. “Libra’s mission is to enable a simple global currency and financial infrastructure that empowers billions of people”, the currency’s mission statement reads, adding that despite all progress made in connectivity and access to information and services, “1.7 billion adults globally remain outside of the financial system with no access to a traditional bank” and that “access to financial services is limited or restricted for those who need it most — those impacted by cost, reliability, and the ability to seamlessly send money”. One of the most important areas that could be impacted by Libra is remittances, i.e. money transfers by m
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    One of the most important areas that could be impacted by Libra is remittances, i.e. money transfers by migrants to their families back home, which have proven to be a crucial driver of economic development. According to the World Bank, remittances to low- and middle-income countries reached a record high of $529 billion in 2018, with total remittances climbing to $689 billion. The problem being that sending money to people without access to a financial system, especially in regions most reliant on remittances such as Sub-Saharan Africa, is difficult and costly.
John Kiff

The Coming Libra Panics - 0 views

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    But if Facebook introduces seamless international transactions for the general public, runs will become commonplace. Inevitably, governments will have to step in to introduce a new form of friction to the system. One partial solution is a small universal financial transaction tax of the type proposed 50 years ago by the Nobel laureate economist James Tobin.
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