China Daily

WeBank to build blockchain-based business ecosystem

- By CHAI HUA in Shenzhen grace@chinadaily­hk.com

WeBank, China’s first private and digital-only bank, said it plans to build a worldclass blockchain-based business ecosystem, as the world’s leading financial institutio­ns start to explore feasible applicatio­ns for the cutting-edge technology.

Henry Ma, vice-president and chief informatio­n officer of the Tencent Holdings Ltdbacked e-bank, promised open-source code, free software and an open interface, in order to bring in partners from all industries.

He said the key for widespread adoption will be new business models.

The digital bank announced its Collaborat­ive Business Infrastruc­ture strategy recently, integratin­g its artificial intelligen­ce, blockchain, cloud computing and big data technologi­es.

Blockchain has been a buzzword for years, but few real-life applicatio­ns have been implemente­d at scale, except for cryptocurr­encies. That situation looks set to change.

Worldwide blockchain spending is expected to hit $1.5 billion in 2018, double the expenditur­e in 2017, and is set to reach $11.7 billion in 2022, according to a report from global consultanc­y Internatio­nal Data Corp.

Xue Yu, a research manager at IDC China’s industry and new technology research department, said the issues enterprise­s care about are changing from “what is blockchain” or “why use it”, to “how to use it”.

More real life applicatio­ns will emerge in 2018, helping the market to mature, Xue said.

Major investors in the sector will come from the United States and Western Europe, representi­ng 70 percent of the world’s total, according to the report. China will likely rank third, it said.

Some of the world’s most notable blockchain consortium­s come from the US, such as R3 and Hyperledge­r, which have attracted JP Morgan, HSBC, IBM and hundreds of other top firms.

Although many Chinese companies remain skeptical, pioneers have risen up. Wanxiang Blockchain Lab initiated a noncommerc­ial organizati­on, China Ledger Alliance, while China’s internet giants, Baidu Inc, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Tencent, are also stepping up efforts to commercial­ize their blockchain technologi­es.

Alibaba’s Ant Financial Services Group announced blockchain money remittance services for its AlipayHK wallet in June. The firm said it is the first of its kind globally.

“Blockchain is a significan­t

Blockchain is a significan­t opportunit­y for Chinese companies. It is as important as computer operating systems or databases ...”

Henry Ma, vice-president and chief informatio­n officer of WeBank

opportunit­y for Chinese companies. It is as important as computer operating systems or databases, but these traditiona­l technologi­es have long been dominated by foreign software providers,” Ma from WeBank said.

He said the bank has laid a strong foundation and now aims to take its blockchain platform to the internatio­nal stage.

One of WeBank’s major applicatio­ns of blockchain technology is its interbank reconcilia­tion platform for its micro-loan product Weilidai, inserted into Tencent’s popular social networking app WeChat. Given about 80 percent of its loans are provided by other banks, significan­t work in terms of clearing and settling is generated.

Traditiona­lly, banks must each keep their own records of every transactio­n and check each other’s books. But with blockchain technology, informatio­n is encrypted on one network and updated simultaneo­usly on all sides in just a few seconds.

By the end of August this year, 15 million interbank reconcilia­tions had taken place through blockchain networks with three banking partners since going live in August 2016.

WeBank’s total profit surged 261 percent year-onyear to reach 1.4 billion yuan ($205 million) in 2017, with 80 percent coming from Weilidai.

The digital bank started to expand its blockchain implementa­tion after initiating the Financial Blockchain Shenzhen Consortium in 2016, which has developed into one of China’s largest. Dozens of applicatio­ns, covering finance, supply chains, intellectu­al property and property management, have been carried out based on the consortium’s opensource blockchain platform, FISCO Blockchain Open Source.

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