Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

HSBC says performed first trade finance transactio­n using blockchain

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HSBC Holdings Plc said yesterday it had performed the world’s first trade finance transactio­n using blockchain technology, a major step in boosting efficiency and reducing errors in the multi-trillion-dollar funding of internatio­nal trade.

HSBC and Dutch bank ING successful­ly completed the transactio­n for food and agricultur­al group Cargill, the British lender said in a statement.

The use of blockchain technology in the banking industry is expected to reduce the risk of fraud in letters of credit and other transactio­ns as well as cut down on the number of steps used.

Letters of credit are one of the most widely used ways of reducing risk between importers and exporters, helping guarantee more than US$2 trillion worth of transactio­ns, but the process creates a long paper trail and takes between five and 10 days to exchange documentat­ion.

“At the moment, buyers and suppliers use a letter of credit, typically concluded by physically transferri­ng paper documents, to underpin transactio­ns,” said Vivek Ramachandr­an, global head of innovation and growth at HSBC’S commercial banking unit.

“What this means for businesses is that trade finance transactio­ns have been made simpler, faster, more transparen­t and more secure.”

Putting all of Asia Pacific’s trade-related paperwork into electronic form could slash the time it takes to export goods by up to 44 percent and cut costs by up to 31 percent, the HSBC statement said, citing a study by the United Nations.

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