Explainer: Digital currency vs cryptos – how are they different?

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The Centre’s plans to ban cryptocurrencies but introduce an official, digital currency. There is some confusion on the differences between the two – there are at least six key variances between official digital currency and cryptocurrency. While all cryptocurrencies could be considered digital currencies, not all digital currencies need to be official sovereign backed currencies. For instance, the virtual currency used in say, an online game, is also a form of digital currency, not backed by a central bank but governed by the game creators. Apart from that, the other key differences are: 

Issuing authority 

Offical digital currencies are issued by the central banks of a nation-state that oversees the banking system in that country. For instance, in India, like regular fiat currency, it will be the Reserve Bank of India that will issue digital currency, when mandated by the government. Similarly, in the US, it will be the Federal Reserve. However, in the case of cryptocurrency, there is no single issuing authority. Cryptocurrencies are usually developed by teams as a piece of code used for issuance through ‘mining’. Creation, as well as use, is maintained through a distributed ledger. They transmit value across a decentralised network of users. Thus while digital currencies are centralised, cryptocurrencies are de-centralised. 

Encryption and underlying tech 

There is little encryption that happens in official digital currency and no special cybersecurity measures. Anyone with a regular online bank account, for instance, can store and use digital currencies. Think of this as a form of e-cash. However, blockchain is the underlying technology used in most cryptocurrencies and, usually, these are stored in ‘wallets’ with a high degree of cyber security. 

While it is true that some of the crypto wallets have been hacked, generally the degree of cyber protective measures taken beforehand are more in the case of cryptocurrencies. 

Stability and fluctuation 

While official digital currencies are largely stable in value and thus easy to own and use in the global market, cryptocurrencies can wildly swing in value. In a single day, the price of a unit of cryptocurrency can vary as much as 50 to 70 per cent. Thus, fiat digital currencies provide more stability, while cryptocurrencies are known for their high degree of volatility and consequent risk. 

Transparency 

One key area where cryptos score is transparency. In this case, the entire history of transactions between two parties can be seen as it is done on blockchain and is immutable (cannot be changed). However, in the case of central bank-issued digital currency, it is the centralised issuing authority that decides how much information it wants to share. The receiver or sender of digital currency will receive information only related to that transaction. 

Cost of transaction 

In the case of digital currency, the issuing authority or the centralised controller can levy transaction fees each time the currency is debited or credited. The blockchain technology used in cryptocurrencies ensures that such expenses are minimised as there is no commission for third parties. This is especially useful when cryptocurrency is used to buy or sell, high-value assets. 

Legal framework 

In most countries, there is some kind of legal framework and protection around official digital currencies. However, when it comes to cryptocurrencies, that is not the case; in several parts of the world, it is still a grey area. Except for El Salvador, which decided to use Bitcoin (currently the most popular cryptocurrency) as legal tender, cryptocurrencies are in unchartered territory with their legal status not clearly defined. 

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Crypto assets pose financial stability challenges: IMF report

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The rapid growth of the crypto ecosystem presents new opportunities, the IMF has said, but also cautioned that the digital currency assets pose financial stability challenges. Cryptocurrencies are digital or virtual currencies in which encryption techniques are used to regulate the generation of units and verify the transfer of funds, operating independently of a central bank.

“The rapid growth of the crypto ecosystem presents new opportunities. Technological innovation is ushering in a new era that makes payments and other financial services cheaper, faster, more accessible, and allows them to flow across borders swiftly,” it said in a chapter of its latest report Global Financial Stability Report.

Innovative financial services

Crypto asset technologies have potential as a tool for faster and cheaper cross-border payments. Bank deposits can be transformed to stable coins that allow instant access to a vast array of financial products from digital platforms and allow instant currency conversion, said the IMF in its chapter titled The Crypto Ecosystem and Financial Stability Challenges.

Decentralised finance could become a platform for more innovative, inclusive, and transparent financial services, it added.

Volatile currency

“Despite potential gains, the rapid growth and increasing adoption of crypto assets also pose financial stability challenges,” the IMF said.

In a recent interview with PTI, Tobias Adrian, the Financial Counsellor and Director of the Monetary and Capital Markets Department of IMF, said that Bitcoin could lead to instability because it is extremely volatile. It was trading above 65,000 earlier this year, and then it came down to below 30,000.

“It might go back up, it might go back down. So if you’re a merchant, and you’re quoting in Bitcoin, you’re exposed to this massive volatility. It is much more volatile than equities or commodities or even exchange rates. It’s a very, very volatile asset, and that is introducing instability,” he said.

“It’s fine as an investment asset. But as a monetary aggregate, it just doesn’t have the right properties,” he added.

Also see: Indian cryptocurrency market likely to reach up to $241 million by 2030: Nasscom

“And let me just add two more problems with that. One is that transaction costs can be fairly expensive and compared to digital money, as it’s the case in India for example, where you have a real-time gross settlement payment system, it’s actually slow because it’s a distributed ledger, and to know that the transaction has gone through, it has to be verified on all of these different computers. So, it’s not that instantaneous, and it can be expensive to transact and it’s extremely volatile. It doesn’t have the properties that you want money to have,” Adrian said.

Destabilise capital flows

The IMF in its report said that challenges posed by the crypto ecosystem include operational and financial integrity risks from crypto asset providers, investor protection risks for crypto-assets and DeFi, and inadequate reserves and disclosure for some stable coins.

“In emerging markets, the advent of crypto assets has benefits but can accelerate cryptoisation and circumvent exchange and capital control restrictions. Increased trading of crypto-assets in these economies could destabilise capital flows,” it said.

Need for regulation

“Policymakers should implement global standards for crypto-assets and enhance their ability to monitor the crypto ecosystem by addressing data gaps. As the role of stable coins grows, regulations should correspond to the risks they pose and the economic functions they perform. Emerging markets faced with cryptoisation risks should strengthen macroeconomic policies and consider the benefits of issuing central bank digital currencies,” the report said.

Also see: China declares all cryptocurrency transactions illegal

In a joint blog post, three IMF officials Dimitris Drakopoulos, Fabio Natalucci, and Evan Papageorgiou wrote that as crypto assets take hold, regulators need to step up.

“Crypto-assets offer a new world of opportunities: Quick and easy payments. Innovative financial services. Inclusive access to previously “unbanked” parts of the world. All are made possible by the crypto ecosystem,” they wrote. “But along with the opportunities come challenges and risks,” it added.

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Author Eswar Prasad, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By the end of 2021, the Reserve Bank of India is likely to launch trials for its digital currency, following the example of several other countries, from China to the Bahamas, which last year launched its Sand Dollar.

The rise of these central bank digital currencies, or CBDCs, essentially virtual versions of currencies backed by the state, will be a major push towards hastening the demise of cash, says Eswar S Prasad, the Tolani senior professor of trade policy and professor of economics at Cornell University. It’s one of the several revolutionary changes under way that Prasad delves into lucidly in his new book, The Future of Money: How the Digital Revolution is Transforming Currencies and Finance (Harvard University Press and HarperCollins India).

Author Prasad, who previously headed the China division of IMF, spoke to Indulekha Aravind on Zoom about the changes sweeping through the world of finance, and his deadline for the death of cash. Edited excerpts:

As someone who has written about the end of the use of cash, how much of it do you use?
You know, I actually still like cash – its tangibility, the personal connection it creates. Very often, I still tip my Uber drivers and food delivery people with cash. But I think even I am beginning to come to terms with the reality that sooner or later, I’m going to have to have an app on my phone to make payments.

In your book, you say it’s only a matter of time before we stop using cash. What’s driving this?
It’s become clear that it’s possible to provide very low-cost and efficient digital payments, even to people who are relatively poor, who may be unbanked. Countries like China, India and Kenya are leading the way in this. So the technology is there, it is easily scalable and that makes it harder to assume cash is going to remain viable. The other important development is that the new financial technologies, especially those underlying cryptocurrencies, have lit a fire under central banks to start issuing their own digital currencies or at least experimenting with them.

I know that India has announced it may start trials towards the end of this year. So if you have digital versions of central bank money available, in addition to low cost private payment systems, I think cash will organically start disappearing simply because people will find the convenience of digital forms of payment substantially override any of the benefits of cash.

RBI deputy governor T Rabi Sankar had said CBDC is something that is likely to be in the arsenal of every central bank. Would you agree?
From the point of view of a government or a central bank, a CBDC has many advantages. First, it brings a lot of economic activity out of the shadows and into the tax net because any transaction that leaves a digital trail is going to be harder to conceal from the authorities. A digital trail also means there is less likelihood that central bank money will be used for nefarious purposes. In addition, it is likely to deter at least cash-fuelled corruption.

There are also certain broader advantages. There are some countries that experimented with the CBDC which view it as a way to increase financial inclusion, the idea being that if the central bank can provide very low cost digital payments, with no barriers to access, then you can bring many more people into the financial system not just by providing easy access to digital payments, but also by using that perhaps as a portal for basic banking services.

In terms of monetary policy, a central bank might find a CBDC attractive during times of major economic or financial crisis. If the CBDC took the form of each household or each individual having effectively an account with a central bank or a digital wallet, that makes certain monetary policy operations easier. For instance, if I wanted to make cash transfers to the population at a time of a very deep recession, you can do it very easily using a CBDC account.

You’ve talked about the advantages of a CBDC. What are some of the risks?
One of the major risks is that a CBDC ends up disintermediating the banking system. What that means is, if people in a country have access to a central bank account, if that’s the form the CBDC takes, they might prefer that to a commercial bank account, even if that CBDC account pays no interest, because they view it as safer.

This becomes a particular problem when there are concerns about the stability of the banking system — you could have a flight of deposits out of the banking system into CBDC accounts, which could precipitate the exact financial instability a CBDC is trying to avoid. Now, in modern economies, commercial banks still play a very important role in creating money, such as by providing loans.

In a country like India, only about 15 to 20% of money that fuels economic activity is created by the central bank. So if commercial banks start facing threats to their existence, then we have to think very hard about who does the job of money creation or credit allocation equally. The second risk is that a CBDC because it is a digital payment system might end up outcompeting with private payment systems, which would squelch private sector innovation. But there are ways around these risks. With the first risk for instance, one could set up a CBDC account with limits on the amount that can be kept in those accounts.

There’s one final, very significant risk, which is to society as a whole. One can think about digital currencies, both private and central bank issued, as being very efficient and making life better in many ways. But the reality is that anything digital is going to leave a trail. So the sort of privacy and confidentiality that cash gives us is going to be difficult to maintain with a CBDC. Whether we want to live in that world is something we all need to think about not just from economic or technocratic terms, but also at the societal level

What are your thoughts on that — I mean, from a societal point of view?
I worry about that a great deal. We need to give this some serious thought rather than getting caught up in the technological razzle dazzle of digital currencies. If we give away the last vestige of privacy afforded through cash transactions, I worry that that could be a world that provides a lot of possibilities, especially for more authoritarian governments, as part of their surveillance of citizens. Most central banks that are talking about CBDC have tried to portray it as a relatively neutral thing, that it will just be a digital replacement for cash, that it will not bear any interest rate, that you could still maintain some degree of privacy. But again, the technology is here for CBDCs to be turned into some form of smart money.

At certain times, this might be useful for economic policies. For instance, if an economy is in a deep recession and you give people money, some might save that money, and then it doesn’t have the sort of effect you would want it to have on economic demand. So you could set up smart money with expiration dates, saying that you either spend this within the next year and that’s going to help the economy or it expires. That might seem like a good thing, but (then) you have different units of central bank money with different purposes and that’s a potential concern.

You could also think of a government, even a seemingly benevolent one, saying it doesn’t want its money used for certain nefarious purposes, such as buying ammunition. So you can very quickly see how we might end up in a situation where you could have central bank money being used not just for economic, but social objectives. This is a very dystopian future I’m painting. But all of these become real possibilities once you have digital money, which is why I think there needs to be a lot of debate and discussion in society before we move forward with CBDCs, and there needs to be appropriate safeguards in place.

What do you make of India’s approach to fintech and how would you contrast it with China’s?
Fintech has a lot of promise in terms of directly connecting savers and borrowers, broadening financial inclusion, giving the masses easy access to digital payments and also as a portal for basic financial services such as edit, savings products and so on. But technology can cut both ways. Network effects, that is, some companies becoming very big and dominating the market, can bite with a vengeance, especially in any sector that uses technology.

So while technology might make it easier for newer operators and small companies to start innovating, one should also be aware of the risks that you could have of the entire system being captured by a handful of major players. There is an interesting contrast between China and India. In China’s case, the government stepped back and let the private sector provide digital payments, which it did very effectively but it’s come at a cost — competition has been deterred and the two dominant companies – WeChat Pay and Alipay — have become economically and politically quite powerful, which is why the government has recently taken steps to cut them down to size.

India’s approach of the government creating a public infrastructure that all entrants have easy access to, so that the big players are not privileged, is a much better way for a government to proceed. But it also shows that the government really has a role to play. You cannot leave these things entirely to the private sector. So long as the government does not intrude as a direct competitor but provides the technical infrastructure and then create some guardrails, in terms of the use of data and promoting competition and entry, I think that’s a really constructive role the government can play.

Coming to cryptocurrency, how do you view the frenzy around Bitcoin?
Bitcoin, of course, was created with a very interesting objective in mind, which was to allow parties to undertake transactions without the use of a trusted intermediary, such as a central bank. And the fact that Bitcoin came up in 2009, right after the global financial crisis, when trust in central banks and commercial banks was at a real nadir, I think allowed it to gain traction.

Now, the reality is that Bitcoin has proven to be a rather ineffective medium of exchange. Its promise of digital anonymity has proved to be something of a mirage and it also turns out that Bitcoin is very cumbersome and expensive to use. Most importantly, it has very unstable value – it’s as if you took Rs 1000 into a coffee shop and you could buy a small cup of coffee one day and a whole meal another day.

But cryptocurrencies have had a real impact on the financial ecosystem. First, the technology is really a marvel. The benefits of that technology are becoming apparent in some of the newer innovations we are seeing, largely under the rubric of decentralized finance that will allow for a democratization of finance, by giving people much easier access to a broad range of financial products and services, by making it easy for developers to create those products and services. And largely by reducing the cost and increasing the efficiency of those. So I think the legacy of the Bitcoin revolution is going to be with us in different forms, even if cryptocurrencies don’t exist.

Now the irony of Bitcoin and other such private cryptocurrencies is that instead of becoming an effective medium of exchange, they have become speculative assets. People who hold Bitcoin right now seem to hold it in the belief that its value can go only one way, up. To an economist, that seems like one massive speculative bubble because there is no intrinsic value to Bitcoin. Bitcoin adherents will tell you that the reason it has value is because of scarcity, that ultimately there are going to be only 21 million Bitcoins. But to me, scarcity alone doesn’t seem like a durable foundation of value. So we’re going to see some turmoil in the Bitcoin market, as far as investors are concerned.

Would this turmoil reflect in other cryptocurrencies?
There are some who talk about diversifying their holdings of crypto currencies by holding a basket of cryptocurrencies, rather than one. But the evidence indicates that cryptocurrency prices move very closely together. I suspect that if it turns out there are either technological vulnerabilities or a crisis of faith that hits the cryptocurrency investing community, it will quickly spread through the entire cryptocurrency world.

Facebook is planning to launch a digital currency, now called Diem (earlier, Libra). Do you see more MNCs following suit?
It will almost certainly happen. The notion of using your own digital tokens that can work effectively on your platform but can also be extended to other platforms is a temptation that few major corporations are going to be able to resist. There are already Amazon Coins that can be used on the platform and it’s not hard to see that it can be used on other platforms.

But you have concerns…
When Facebook proposed its crypto currency or stable coin, initially called Libra, it professed very noble objectives because the access to digital payments is still very limited in many economies and cross-border payments in particular are fraught with frictions. But the reality is that you would have a major corporation with very substantial financial resources and a worldwide reach that would effectively be managing a currency.

It would hardly be inconceivable that this currency would quickly gain traction and could lead to a situation where Facebook would no longer have its cryptocurrency, backed up by reserves of hard currencies, it would basically become a monetary authority of its own, even though they have indicated they have no plans to do so.

There are also concerns about whether Facebook would sufficiently closely monitor the activity on the payment network so that it could convince regulators that Diem would not be used for illicit money transfers. And it’s not just the financial risk – it would be one more way for FB to get access to our financial and social lives and that is a very disturbing prospect.

My final question — what’s your timeline for the demise of cash?
That depends on how quickly two things happen: the maturing of the technology underlying cryptocurrency so that it can actually provide more efficient payments, and when central banks start rolling out their digital currencies. My sense is that we are going to see very substantial changes in the next three to five years.

Like I said, no central bank is going to eliminate cash but we’ll organically see the use of cash disappearing very fast. Even in economies where cash is very widely used right now, in the next 10 years or so, the use of cash for legitimate financial transactions is going to be at a minimal level.



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Reserve Bank working towards phased implementation of digital currencies

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The time for introduction of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) is possibly near, with the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) currently working towards a phased implementation strategy and examining use cases which could be implemented with little or no disruption, according to Deputy Governor T Rabi Sankar.

Referring to countries generally implementing specific purpose CBDCs in the wholesale and retail segments, Sankar observed that going forward, after studying the impact of these models, launch of general purpose CBDCs will be evaluated.

A CBDC is the legal tender issued by a central bank in a digital form. It is the same as a fiat currency and is exchangeable one-to-one with the fiat currency. Only its form is different.

Some key issues under examination by the RBI relate to the scope of CBDCs – whether they should be used in retail payments or also in wholesale payments; the underlying technology — whether it should be a distributed ledger or a centralised ledger, for instance, and whether the choice of technology should vary according to use cases, the Deputy Governor said.

Further, the validation mechanism — whether token-based or account-based distribution architecture — whether direct issuance by the RBI or through banks; degree of anonymity etc., are also being examined.

However, conducting pilots in wholesale and retail segments may be a possibility in near future.

Benefits and risks

At a webinar organised by New Delhi-based Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy, Sankar emphasised that introduction of CBDC has the potential to provide significant benefits such as reduced dependency on cash, higher seigniorage due to lower transaction costs, reduced settlement risk.

“Introduction of CBDC would possibly lead to a more robust, efficient, trusted, regulated and legal tender-based payments option,” he said.

The Deputy Governor cautioned that there are associated risks, no doubt, but they need to be carefully evaluated against the potential benefits.

He underscored that it would be the RBI’s endeavour, as we move forward in the direction of India’s CBDC, to take the necessary steps which would reiterate the leadership position of India in payment systems.”

Sankar said CBDC is a digital or virtual currency but it is not comparable to the private virtual currencies that have mushroomed over the last decade.

“Private virtual currencies sit at substantial odds to the historical concept of money. They are not commodities or claims on commodities as they have no intrinsic value; some claims that they are akin to gold clearly seem opportunistic.

“Usually, certainly for the most popular ones now, they do not represent any person’s debt or liabilities. There is no ISSUER. They are not money (certainly not CURRENCY) as the word has come to be understood historically,” he cautioned.

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BIS, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Central bank digital currencies can offer “finality, liquidity and integrity”, and could provide strong data governance as well as privacy standards based on digital identities, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) said on Wednesday. The backing for such currencies by the Switzerland-headquartered BIS, which is also known as the central bank of all central banks, also comes at a time when there are ongoing intense discussions in India and many other countries on crypto currencies.

Noting that central banks stand at the centre of a rapid transformation of the financial sector and the payment system, BIS said Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) represent a unique opportunity to design a technologically advanced representation of central bank money, one that offers the unique features of finality, liquidity and integrity.

“Innovations such as crypto currencies, stable coins and the walled garden ecosystems of big techs all tend to work against the public good element that underpins the payment system.

“The DNA (Data-Network-Activities) loop, which should encourage a virtuous circle of greater access, lower costs and better services, is also capable of fomenting a vicious circle of entrenched market power and data concentration. The eventual outcome will depend not only on technology but on the underlying market structure and data governance framework,” BIS said.

On Wednesday, BIS released a chapter titled ‘CBDCs: an opportunity for the monetary system’ that is part of its Annual Economic Report 2021.

To realise the full potential of CBDCs for more efficient cross-border payments, BIS said international collaboration will be paramount.

“Cooperation on CBDC designs will also open up new ways for central banks to counter foreign currency substitution and strengthen monetary sovereignty,” it

A few countries, including China, are working on CBDCs.

An analysis BIS found that CBDCs would best function as part of a two-tier system where the central bank and the private sector work together to do what each does well.

From a practical perspective, the BIS said the most promising CBDC design would be one tied to a digital identity, requiring users to identify themselves to access funds. A careful design would balance protecting users against the abuse of personal data with protecting the payment system against money laundering and financial crime, it added.



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Coinbase to allow users to use card via Apple, Google wallets

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Coinbase Global Inc launched a tie-up with Apple and Alphabet Inc’s Google on Tuesday that will allow users to add cards from their accounts to the payment apps run by the two tech giants.

The Coinbase card added to the wallets can be used to buy everyday goods with digital currencies, the biggest US cryptocurrency exchange said in a blog post. (https://bit.ly/3wN2wNN)

Also read: Investors cheer after RBI clarifies crypto trading isn’t banned

The company said it will automatically convert all cryptocurrency to US dollars and transfer the funds to a customer’s Coinbase Card for use in purchases and ATM withdrawals.

It also said users can earn crypto rewards on their shopping when a Coinbase Card is used with Apple Pay or Google Pay.

Coinbase’s move comes after PayPal Holdings Inc said it would allow US consumers to use their cryptocurrency holdings to pay millions of its online merchants globally, significantly boosting use of digital assets in everyday commerce.

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Dogecoin surges on Elon Musk tweet as crypto rollercoaster continues, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Yakob Peterseil

Dogecoin jumped on renewed support from Elon Musk, adding to a volatile week for digital currencies that’s been whipped up largely by the Tesla Inc. chief executive officer himself.

After Musk tweeted on Thursday that he is working with Dogecoin developers to “improve system transaction efficiency,” the Shiba-Inu-themed token with no practical uses surged from about 43 cents to 51 cents in a matter of minutes. It’s up by about 30% in the past 24 hours, according to Coinmarketcap.com.

Bitcoin fluctuated on Friday, and was trading at around $50,700 as of 10 a.m. in New York. The largest digital token is on course for a weekly slump of more than 10%.

Tweets from the billionaire electric car CEO have roiled crypto markets this week and raised questions about his motives. Musk started the week calling Dogecoin “a hustle” and continued with a series of tweets criticizing crypto mining, which at one point sent Bitcoin down as much as 15%.

Dogecoin, which tumbled after Musk’s Saturday Night Live appearance, has now clawed its way back to being the fourth-largest cryptocurrency with a market cap of $67 billion, according to Coinmarketcap.com. Sentiment was also boosted by news that Coinbase Global Inc., the largest U.S. crypto exchange, plans to offer Dogecoin on its trading platform in six to eight weeks.

Around the same time as his Dogecoin tweet, the Tesla CEO lobbed more criticism at crypto mining following a decision to suspend Tesla car purchases using Bitcoin. Musk said that he worries about a “massive increase” in coal and other carbon-intensive energy to generate electricity needed to mine digital currency.



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Fed’s Rosengren says important to understand trade-offs of digital currencies, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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The Federal Reserve is exploring the technology that would be required to establish a central bank digital currency, but more research needs to be done before it would move forward with a currency, Boston Fed Bank President Eric Rosengren said on Wednesday.

“It is important to highlight that this is exploratory work, and any decision to move forward with such a currency would depend on a variety of factors beyond the technological feasibility and implementation,” Rosengren said in remarks prepared for a virtual event organized by Harvard Law School.

A central bank digital currency could improve financial inclusion, reduce the cost of cross-border financial transactions and provide more flexibility for implementing monetary policy, he said.

But Fed officials would need to fully consider the policy implications and trade-offs that come with using a digital currency, including possible threats to financial stability, Rosengren said.

“It is important to highlight that this is exploratory work, and any decision to move forward with such a currency would depend on a variety of factors beyond the technological feasibility and implementation,” Rosengren said

They plan to release a white paper and open source code early in the third quarter of this year, and later phases of the research project will focus on privacy, anti-money laundering and other issues.

“It is important to understand what problems a central bank digital currency is being designed to solve, and whether other technologies could more cheaply or efficiently address those problems,” Rosengren said.



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After Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan prepares to offer rich clients access to bitcoin fund

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With the latest move, JPMorgan would be the latest and biggest US megabank to adopt crypto as an asset class.

Investment bank JPMorgan’s crypto and blockchain efforts are on a roll. The bank is now looking to offer an actively managed bitcoin fund for clients in its private wealth division. With the latest move, JPMorgan would be the latest and biggest US megabank to adopt crypto as an asset class. The development, which was reported by CoinDesk on Monday, may see the bitcoin fund launched as soon as this summer. The move would also signal a shift in the company’s outlook towards cryptocurrencies as its CEO Jamie Dimon had reportedly called bitcoin a dangerous fraud in 2017 and had also threatened to fire employees who traded bitcoin. Last month, according to a CNBC report, Morgan Stanley had become the first big US bank to offer its wealthy clients access to bitcoin funds after they demand exposure to the cryptocurrency.

Comments from JPMorgan regarding the development were not immediately available.

Even as the bitcoin fund is the latest step by JPMorgan, its investment, commercial banking, and wealth management divisions have gradually evolved in their treatment of crypto and blockchain. As per CoinDesk, the bank’s research analysts regularly issue market insight on bitcoin’s price and prospects in reports available to clients. In February, it had tested blockchain’s decentralised network in space to see if two machines could transact autonomously. The experiment involved carrying out blockchain-based payments between satellites in space “which validated the approach towards a decentralized network where communication with the earth is not necessary,” according to a statement by the Nasdaq-listed manufacturer and supplier of nanosatellites for customers in the academic, government, and commercial markets – GomSpace.

Also read: Coinbase India plan: Acquire startups, hire ‘hundreds’ of employees in 2 yrs, says incoming country head

Earlier this month, JPMorgan had launched a new solution called Confirm using blockchain technology to improve funds transfers between banking institutions globally and to help bring down the number of “rejected or returned transactions caused by mismatched payment details,” according to the investment bank. As a result, the solution will lead to lowering costs for both the sending and receiving banks. “JPMorgan getting into blockchain is going to help a lot on the institutional side of fund transfers. It is looking to resolve the clearing and settlement problem which happens in the bank-to-bank transfers and takes multiple days to settle. With blockchain, JPMorgan and banks will be able to settle it in near real-time,” Ashish Agarwal, a blockchain expert and Founder of PayO — neo banking platform for SMEs – had told Financial Express Online.

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Piyush Gupta, CEO, DBS, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Digital currencies and tokenisation of assets are a reality and may be a dominant factor in the future, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that Bitcoin could replace fiat currency as a medium of exchange, said Piyush Gupta, CEO of DBS. “We launched the first bank-sponsored digital exchange in December, which lets you tokenise assets and securities,” said Gupta, ET’s Global Indian of the Year.

“So by our action we are creating capabilities for crypto, digital currencies and tokenisation for the future. But Bitcoin as a replacement for money is still challenging. Money is a medium of exchange, a unit of account and store of value.’’ The world is divided on the future of cryptocurrencies with regulators like the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) opposing them as a medium of exchange, while billionaire entrepreneurs like Elon Musk are backing them.

While cryptocurrencies have become a craze, the volatility of Bitcoin has made administrations nervous.

“Bitcoin is not a good medium of exchange because even though Elon Musk says he will take it for Tesla, it is very hard to do transactions because you can only do nine transactions per second while Visa and Mastercard can do hundreds of thousands,” said Gupta.

Gupta of DBS, which became the first international bank to acquire a domestic, troubled lender in recent memory, said that Lakshmi Vilas Bank fits into our strategy. He visualised the growth path a few years ago through the subsidiarisation of DBS in India to gain equal footing with domestic banks. “We were mentally prepared and had done some homework around a range of possibilities and that allowed us to respond very quickly,” he said. DBS India took over Lakshmi Vilas Bank last year



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