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John Kiff

Interlinking payment systems and the role of application programming interfaces - 0 views

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    The Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures (CPMI) published a report that provides a framework to help payment system operators and authorities understand and evaluate the benefits, challenges and risks of interlinking arrangements. It also provides an overview of important trends in interlinking arrangements and adoption of application programming interfaces (APIs) by payment systems. Interlinking arrangements allow banks and other payment service providers to transact with each other without requiring them to participate in the same payment system or use intermediaries. Such arrangements can shorten transaction chains, reduce overall costs and increase the transparency and speed of payments.
John Kiff

Interlinking FPSs to enhance cross-border payments - 0 views

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    The Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures (CPMI) published a summary of the high-level findings of a July 2024 conference on expediting the interlinking of fast payment systems (FPSs). It found that emerging markets and developing economies have made considerable progress in fast payment adoption. As the number of domestic FPSs grow, opportunities are emerging to facilitate the cross-border interlinking of safe and efficient FPS. Work is under way in many jurisdictions to enhance FPS readiness to participate in such links, particularly to improve their functionality and align with messaging and compliance standards. Successful links to date have prioritized interoperability and smoothly managed coordination between the public and private sectors and among jurisdictions. It is expected that FPS links in the near term will be based on bilateral links, while over the longer term, these may coexist with more open and future-proof multilateral arrangements. Over time, the market will likely evolve to link between regional groupings (see https://www.bis.org/cpmi/publ/brief5.htm).
John Kiff

Towards the holy grail of cross-border payments; the interlinking solution - 0 views

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    "The holy grail of cross-border payments is a solution allowing cross-border payments to be immediate, cheap, universal, and settled in a secure settlement medium. The search for such a solution is as old as international commerce and the implied need to pay. Based on Bindseil and Pantelopoulos (2022), this policy brief describes in particular one vision as to how the holy grail can be found within the next decade through interlinked instant payment systems with a FX conversion layer. In doing so, the settlement mechanics are explained, and an assessment is provided on its potential to be the holy grail of cross-border payments."
John Kiff

Fast payment system interlinking and APIs to enhance cross-border payments - 0 views

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    The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) published two Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures (CPMI) reports that offer key insights and recommendations on the interlinking and interoperability of payment systems to enhance cross-border payments. The first report discusses design choices and the risk implications of interlinked fast payment systems (FPSs) and the role of application programming interfaces (APIs), setting out the key decisions for governance and outlines recommendations for their oversight. The second report presents ten recommendations to promote the harmonization of APIs to enhance cross-border payments. https://www.bis.org/cpmi/publ/d223.htm https://www.bis.org/cpmi/publ/d224.htm
John Kiff

Towards the holy grail of cross-border payments - 0 views

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    The European Central Bank (ECB) published a paper that describes current visions of how to eventually find the holy grail of immediate, cheap, universal cross-border payments settled in a secure settlement medium. It focuses on six potential solutions; (i) modernized correspondent banking; (ii) emerging cross-border FinTech solutions; (iii) Bitcoin; (iv) global stablecoins; (v) interlinked instant payment systems with FX conversion layer; (vi) interlinked CBDC with FX conversion layer. For each, settlement mechanics are explained, and an assessment is provided on its potential to be the holy grail of cross-border payments. Several solutions are suitable for improving cross-border payments significantly, and some could even be the holy grail.
John Kiff

Linking fast payment systems across borders - 0 views

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    The CPMI published a consultative report on initial considerations on governance and oversight for fast payment system (FPS) interlinking across borders. The interlinking of FPS is one of the most promising solutions for enhancing cross-border payments, offering the prospect of significantly faster, cheaper, more accessible and transparent cross-border payments. 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.
John Kiff

Towards the Holy Grail of Cross-Border Payments - 0 views

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    "The holy grail of cross-border payments is a solution allowing cross-border payments to be immediate, cheap, universal, and settled in a secure settlement medium. The search for such a solution is as old as international commerce and the implied need to pay. This paper describes current visions how to eventually find this holy grail within the next decade, namely through (i) modernized correspondent banking; (ii) emerging cross-border FinTech solutions; (iii) Bitcoin; (iv) global stablecoins; (v) interlinked instant payment systems with FX conversion layer; (vi) interlinked CBDC with FX conversion layer. For each, settlement mechanics are explained, and an assessment is provided on its potential to be the holy grail of cross-border payments. Several solutions are suitable for improving cross-border payments significantly, and some could even be the holy grail. "
John Kiff

Interlinking Fast Payment Systems for Cross-border Payments - 0 views

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    The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) published a report on the benefits, design choices and challenges associated with linking fast payment systems (FPSs) across countries. It finds that connecting FPSs has the potential to considerably improve the speed and transparency of cross-border payments, benefiting both end users and service providers. Crucial to realizing these benefits are well-designed governance, scheme rules and payments processing capabilities, which help to manage risk and ensure a seamless cross-border payments experience. However, establishing an interlinking arrangement poses challenges, including dealing with differences in legal and regulatory frameworks across participating jurisdictions and agreeing on governance arrangements and scheme rules
John Kiff

CBDCs beyond borders: results from a survey of central banks - 0 views

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    This Bank for International Settlements (BIS) paper explores initial thinking on the cross-border use of central bank digital currency (CBDC) based on a survey of 50 central banks in the first quarter of 2021. While most central banks have yet to take a firm decision on issuing a CBDC, the survey responses show a tentative inclination towards allowing use of a future CBDC by tourists and other non-residents domestically. They have a cautious approach to allowing use of a CBDC beyond their own jurisdiction. Concerns about the economic and monetary implications of cross-border CBDC use and about private sector global stablecoins are taken seriously. At the wholesale level, 28% of surveyed central banks are considering options to make CBDCs interoperable by forming multi-CBDC arrangements. This involves arrangements that enhance compatibility, interlink or even integrate multiple CBDCs into a single payments system. Finally, almost 14% of respondents are considering an active role for the central bank in FX conversion.
John Kiff

China's PBOC: Link e-CNY & Hong Kong Faster Payment System - 0 views

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    The People's Bank of China is reportedly working with the Hong Kong Monetary Authority on adding cross-border payment features to China's e-CNY retail CBDC. They've run preliminary technical tests with a limited number of Hong Kong residents who could create e-CNY wallets with basic features, such as top-up, transfer and payments to certain merchants. And now they're exploring approaches for interlinking the e-CNY and the Faster Payment System in Hong Kong.
John Kiff

India, UAE to Trade in Local Currencies, Link Payments Systems - 0 views

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    The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates (CBUAE) have agreed to a framework to promote use of Indian rupee (INR) and UAE Dirham (AED) usage for cross-border transactions, and work towards interlinking their fast payment systems (FPSs), to cut transaction costs by eliminating dollar conversions. More specifically, they will link India's unified payments interface (UPI) with the UAE instant payment platform (IPP), and also link their respective card switches (RuPay switch and UAESWITCH).
John Kiff

MAS kickstarts new round of asset tokenization pilots - 0 views

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    The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) will commence a new series of asset tokenization pilots in collaboration with 17 international banks. The initiative is an extension to MAS' Project Guardian, in which the central bank collaborated with 15 financial institutions to carry out industry pilots on asset tokenization in fixed income, foreign exchange, and asset management products. The five new pilot projects explore a new set of use cases including listing, distribution, trading, settlement, and asset servicing. Additionally, MAS is collaborating with international policymakers and financial institutions to create an open digital infrastructure called Global Layer One (GL1) to facilitate seamless cross-border transactions and enable trading of tokenized assets across global liquidity pools while adhering to regulatory requirements. Furthermore, MAS is working with the financial industry to develop an Interlinked Network Model (INM) as a common framework for exchanging digital assets across independent networks, enabling transactions among financial institutions without the need for all to be on the same network. https://www.mas.gov.sg/news/media-releases/2023/mas-partners-financial-industry-to-expand-asset-tokenisation-initiatives
John Kiff

IMF and World Bank Approach to Cross-Border Payments Technical Assistance - 0 views

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    The IMF and World Bank published a paper that outlines their multi-year strategy to provide technical assistance (TA) to help member countries meet the G20 Roadmap for Enhancing Cross-border Payments. A stocktaking exercise shows that their TA supports the Roadmap's three interconnected priority themes: (i) payment system interoperability and extension, (ii) legal, regulatory, and supervisory frameworks, and (iii) cross-border data exchange and message standards. Going forward, the TA will focus on access to payment systems, extending and aligning operating hours, interlinking of payment systems (especially fast payment systems), promoting the access to and use of digital ID and data exchange across borders, ISO 20022 message standards harmonization, and the application of Anti-Money Laundering/Combating the Financing of Terrorism (AML/CFT) rules.
John Kiff

Connecting digital islands - Swift CBDC sandbox project - 0 views

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    SWIFT announced further progress on its experimental solution for interlinking central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), reporting that 18 central and commercial banks found "clear potential and value" in the API-based CBDC connector after a comprehensive review. SWIFT published the findings of the 12-week period of collaborative sandbox testing, in which almost 5,000 transactions were simulated between two different blockchain networks and with existing fiat-based payment systems. Sandbox participants included the Banque de France, the Deutsche Bundesbank, the Monetary Authority of Singapore, BNP Paribas, HSBC, Intesa Sanpaolo, NatWest, Royal Bank of Canada, SMBC, Société Générale, Standard Chartered and UBS. Over the coming months SWIFT will develop a beta version of the solution for payments that can be tested further by central banks. A second phase of sandbox testing will also be held, in which the SWIFT community can collaborate further with a focus on new use cases.
John Kiff

Successful testing paves way for CBDC use cross-border - 0 views

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    SWIFT published the results of their experimental central bank digital currency (CBDC) interlinking solution in a sandbox environment with 18 central and commercial banks. It was successfully tested across almost 5,000 transactions between two different blockchain networks and a traditional fiat currency. SWIFT concluded that their solution can meet the needs of CBDC interoperability, ensuring CBDCs can be successfully used in cross-border payments.
John Kiff

The OMFIF 2022 Future of Payments Report - 0 views

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    The Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum (OMFIF) published the 2022 edition of its Future of Payments report. It focuses particularly on the challenges of cross-border payments for emerging market countries, delving into the validity of cryptocurrencies and stablecoins as a means of escaping domestic inflation and sending cheap remittances. It also examines the value proposition of CBDC for emerging markets, as well as looking at some of the progress made by CBDC cross-border integration projects. Notably, while central banks think that interlinking CBDCs might be a promising avenue for enhancing cross-border payments, they are not pursuing CBDC in order to provide a solution to the cross-border payments problem. The consensus is that CBDCs must justify their existence with other merits , such as improving financial inclusion.
John Kiff

SWIFT hails results of CBDC connector testing - 0 views

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    SWIFT says a new round of sandbox testing has found that its central bank digital currency interlinking technology can enable financial institutions to carry out a wide range of transactions using central bank digital currency (CBDC) and other forms of digital tokens, easily incorporating them into their business practices. Over six months, SWIFT worked with 38 global institutions and over 125 sandbox users, and made more than 750 transactions, including simulated digital trade, tokenized asset and FX networks, as well as CBDCs for payments. The testing showed that SWIFT's CBDC connector has the potential to simplify and speed up trade flows, unlock growth in tokenized securities markets, and enable efficient FX settlement, while allowing financial institutions to continue to make use of their existing infrastructure.
John Kiff

Hong Kong still cautious about introducing a retail CBDC - 0 views

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    Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) CEO Eddie Yue remains skeptical about the benefits of a retail central bank digital currency (CBDC). H started by listing some of the potential benefits, including serving as a fundamental layer to facilitate interoperability and interlinking between various future digital economy participants. Also, it could act as a bridge between different types of privately-issued digital money, and ensure all private money to be exchangeable with a public money on demand and at par. He also envisioned that a retail CBDC could be a potential "backbone" and anchor, bridging a legal tender and digital assets, offering price stability and confidence needed to empower more innovations, and developing a vibrant sector and ecosystem for digital assets in Hong Kong. Nevertheless, Mr. Yue said that more research is needed on whether its benefits outweigh the risks, particularly "given the generally efficient and competitive retail payment ecosystem in Hong Kong" [and the HKMA] will continue to take a use-case driven approach in thinking about whether and when to introduce a retail CBDC." https://www.hkma.gov.hk/eng/news-and-media/speeches/2024/04/20240411-1/
John Kiff

CPMI work program includes tokenization, CBDC - 0 views

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    The Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures (CPMI) published its work program and strategic priorities for its 2024/25. The program's key themes include the enhancement of cross-border payments, with a particular emphasis on the interlinking of fast payment systems, and digital innovations in payments, clearing and settlement. The latter will include tokenization in the context of money and payments, functionality of cross-border central bank digital currencies and central bank collaboration, and multicurrency and asset-linked stablecoin arrangements. https://www.bis.org/press/p240523.htm
John Kiff

The Role of Public Money in the Digital Age - 0 views

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    The Bank of Canada (BOC) published a paper that argues that there is now and will continue to be a fundamental need for a relevant retail public money (cash or central bank digital currency (CBDC)) as part of a well-functioning monetary system in which public and private money coexist and complement each other while trading at par, allowing money to move back and forth safely and efficiently. The paper posits that increasing demand for digital payments and the declining use of cash could lead to a loss of the uniformity of money, adoption of alternative units of account and exclusion of some segments of the population. This could lead to frictions and potential abuse of market power by private money providers that could reduce the efficiency of the economy. Also, to perform its interlinking function, retail public money needs to be a viable payment option and a practical mechanism to transfer between private forms of money. The paper argues that a properly designed CBDC would help fill the gap and maintain the relevance of a retail public money in the economy.
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