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Topic: Banks & Blockchain Tech - The Future? (Read 112 times)

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peg-token.com
December 24, 2017, 08:52:58 AM
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One of the most talked-about topics in the financial services industry today is blockchain. If fully adopted, it will enable banks to process payments more quickly and more accurately while reducing transaction processing costs and the requirement for exceptions.

However, to capitalize on this potential, banks need to build the infrastructure required to create and operate a true global network using solutions based on this transformative technology.

A survey found that blockchain use is, indeed, top of mind among banking executives who lead payments businesses. Perhaps most critically, the survey revealed what executives believe must happen for blockchain to gain prominence globally.

Banks are definitely interested in blockchain. However, most banks we surveyed are still in the early stages of adoption, with about three-quarters either involved in a proof-of-concept, formulating their blockchain strategy, or just beginning to look into it.

Regardless of progress, the most prevalent use cases banks are studying involve intra-bank cross-border transfers. Cross-border remittances, corporate payments, and inter-bank cross-border transfers are receiving comparatively less attention. But wherever they hope to deploy blockchain, executives expect a wide range of benefits, including lower costs, quicker settlement, fewer errors and exceptions, and new revenue opportunities.


A global network is critical to helping banks use blockchain to help transform payments at scale and help reduce risk of failure. The most effective network should have two defining characteristics:

    1. It should include the necessary defined rights, obligations, controls, and standards.

    2. It should offer a quick and efficient onboarding process that enables banks to essentially “plug and play” into the network for both existing and future corridors.

Importantly, many executives also noted that the network should not be an exclusive club. “The network should be open to banks and non banks to create a level playing field,” said one executive at a global bank.

Much work remains to define the rules of engagement and help create the basics of the network before banks can move past a discussion of the technology itself and begin exploring how to actually use it to improve their business.

Regardless of who's creating and driving the network, banks roundly agree that blockchain needs a robust network for success.

Blockchain and distributed ledgers have a bright future. As real-time, open-source and trusted platforms that securely transmit data and value, they can help banks not only reduce the cost of processing payments, but also create new products and services that can generate important new revenue streams.

The biggest key to turning blockchain’s potential into reality is a collaborative effort among banks to create the network necessary to support global payments. Banks need to look at the bigger picture and work together—and with non-banks—to help define the backbone that can underpin a universally accepted, ubiquitous global payment system that can transform how banks execute transactions.

In the words of one executive  “The technology will only work if everyone adopts it. It has to be all or nothing.”



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