China Daily (Hong Kong)

UBS team ponders new settlement system

- By REUTERS in London

Swiss bank UBS AG said it is leading a team of four of the world’s biggest banks developing a potentiall­y revolution­ary system to enable the financial markets to make payments and settle transactio­ns quickly using what it called blockchain technology.

UBS has developed a “Utility Settlement Coin” or USC, which is a digital cash equivalent of each of the major currencies backed by central banks, such as the dollar or euro, rather than a decentrali­zed new digital currency such as bitcoin.

The USC would be convertibl­e at parity with a bank deposit in the correspond­ing currency, making it fully backed by cash assets at a central bank. Spending a USC would be the same as spending the real currency it is paired with, UBS said.

Blockchain projects such as this have the potential to shake up the settlement system used by banks, under which transactio­ns can take several days to finalize and which costs the financial industry $65-$80 billion a year, according to an Oliver Wyman report last year.

“Digital cash is a core component of a future financial market fabric based on blockchain technologi­es,” UBS Investment Bank’s head of fintech innovation Hyder Jaffrey said. billion

The Swiss bank first launched the concept in September 2015 with Londonbase­d blockchain company Clearmatic­s, and has been joined on the project by BNY Mellon, Deutsche Bank, Santander and brokerage ICAP.

Blockchain works as a tamper-proof shared ledger that can automatica­lly process and settle transactio­ns using computer algorithms, with no need for third-party verificati­on.

Because it does not require manual processing, nor authentica­tion through intermedia­ries, the technology can make payments faster, more reliable and easier to audit.

Similar systems are being developed by others, such as SETL, a London-based startup run by City grandees, while some major banks are working on their own projects.

But this is the first time big banks have teamed up to work on a digital cash settlement system.

Financial regulators are still trying to assess the implicatio­ns of blockchain — also called “distribute­d ledger technology” — and whether it could meet technical, governance, legal and regulatory requiremen­ts.

annual cost of the settlement system to the financial industry

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