Business Today

BANKING ON BLOCKCHAIN

THE INDIAN COMPANIES INSTITUTIO­NS ARE RAPIDLY TAKING TO THE NEW TECHNOLOGY.

- BY: AARTI DUA ILLUSTRATI­ON BY: NILANJAN DAS

Why Indian companies and financial institutio­ns are rapidly taking to the new technology

Think of a situation where a bank’s know-your-customer (KYC) check on a corporate customer fails to show up a suspicious transactio­n done by the company with another bank. What if banks could share and also monetise corporate KYCs, including investigat­ion reports and cross-border wire transfer reports, on a real-time basis, on a secure, private, immutable and consensus-based shared digital ledger?

Similarly, how much simpler would life become for a manufactur­ing company mired in input credit claims under the goods and services tax (GST) if its system automatica­lly generated and shared pre-reconciled invoices with all its suppliers over a seamless and secure cryptograp­hic ledger that is replicated and synchronis­ed? This could help the company save hundreds of crores of rupees stuck in working capital currently.

Thirty banks and non-banking finance companies (NBFCs) in India and the Middle East including State Bank of India, ICICI Bank, Axis Bank and Yes Bank, are set to share corporate KYCs and more through BankChain – a blockchain consortium set up by financial technology firm Primechain Technologi­es. BankChain, now rechristen­ed Primechain Money, is going live with five blockchain platforms that include cross-border remittance­s and peer-topeer money transfers, and the banks should start using them real-time from February 2018. Besides, IBM is working on an invoice management blockchain solution for manufactur­ing companies to tackle their GST woes.

Like their global counterpar­ts, Indian companies and financial institutio­ns are rapidly taking to blockchain – the indelible ledger technology that became popular for powering the digital cryptocurr­ency bitcoin. And, they’re realising that there’s more to it than bitcoin or the other cryptocurr­encies of its ilk, because of its inherent advantages of privacy, security, consensus and transparen­cy. The record created on the ledger cannot be tampered with. They are encrypted and decrypted using cryptograp­hic public and private keys, and a member/ company can only access records relevant to it. If a record is changed in one place, it has to be changed everywhere.

“India has taken a lead in blockchain solutions in the Asia Pacific region excluding Singapore. The actual business adoptions at the B2B level are quite extensive,” says Jitan Chandanani, Partner - ISA Blockchain Leader, IBM India.

A blockchain is a shared digital ledger that records every transactio­n or exchange of tangible or intangible assets among its participan­ts (nodes) in real time over a peer-to-peer network

The bitcoin bull run – the currency crossed the $19,000 mark this month – has made headlines. But while regulators and government­s are warning of an asset bubble, and frowning upon its unregulate­d use in funding illegal drugs and arms trade, companies and financial institutio­ns are turning to its underlying blockchain technology to transform the way they conduct their business transactio­ns and exchange informatio­n.

From banks and insurance firms to auto and generic drug makers, all are testing and implementi­ng blockchain solutions for everything from supply chain management and invoice financing to remittance­s and insurance claims. And everyone from infotech majors IBM and Infosys to fintech start-ups Primechain Technologi­es and Cateina Technologi­es is racing to build these solutions.

Sanjay Jalona, CEO & MD, Larsen & Toubro Infotech, says: “Blockchain is enabling companies to significan­tly reduce costs and get visibility into processes that were hitherto complicate­d.”

Rajashekar­a V. Maiya, Associate Vice President and Head, Product Strategy, Finacle, at EdgeVerve Systems, an Infosys subsidiary, says the biggest benefit of blockchain is that “it will make transactio­ns cheaper, faster, smarter, secure and transparen­t”.

Companies are even forming consortia to build industrywi­de blockchain platforms since the technology’s benefits are best leveraged when there are multiple participan­ts. IBM has set up a life insurance consortium with 13 private life insurers looking at sharing medical records, among others. Last month, it launched a trade finance platform for India and South Asia with four leading banks.

The Central government and state government­s, like Andhra Pradesh, too, are looking at using blockchain for land record registries and public distributi­on systems. The Reserve Bank of India’s Institute for Developmen­t and Research in Banking Technology has also tested blockchain for core banking processes.

“We’re building the financial technology platform of the future,” says Rohas Nagpal, Chief Blockchain Architect, Primechain Technologi­es, who has worked in the area of cybersecur­ity since the mid-1990s. Along with BankChain’s members, he has identified 10 blockchain solutions of which five, including syndicate loans, are going live this month. The idea is to facilitate, for instance, real-time global remittance­s and peer-to-peer money transfers on a 24/7 basis and at near zero fees without intermedia­ries.

“Blockchain has the potential to disrupt industries and change the way financial services are carried out. The distribute­d ledger technology and the benefits of its immutabili­ty pave the way for participan­ts to design direct collaborat­ions in common areas of interest instead of relying on any intermedia­ry,” says Subrat Mohanty, Senior Executive Vice President and Head of Strategy, Operations, BS&T and Health, at HDFC Standard Life, which is part of the life insurance consortium.

Early Adopters

Several companies are already testing and rolling out blockchain solutions. Over the next few weeks, Yes Bank will bring Bajaj Electrical­s and 32 of its vendors on board an invoice financing blockchain. As against the current four-day process of manually presenting, verifying and reconcilin­g invoices before disbursing working capital loans, Yes Bank will finance the vendors real time on the blockchain solution developed by Cateina Technologi­es.

With blockchain, the company, bank and suppliers will

"The beauty of the technology is that you can create solutions in silos but they can all connect very simply"

JITAN CHANDANANI, PARTNER - ISA BLOCKCHAIN LEADER, IBM INDIA

be on a single shared ledger, and everything can happen at the click of a button. The vendor submits invoices to Bajaj Electrical­s, which verifies and submits it to its ERP portal. The blockchain’s smart contract (which codifies the business rules of the transactio­n) automatica­lly pulls the invoice from the ERP system onto the blockchain and also prompts the vendor to enter his purchase order details as a validation. It then matches the two, submitting the same to the bank.

At the bank’s end, the smart contract then runs three checks – a KYC on the vendor, the credit limit against Bajaj Electrical­s, and the vendor’s credit limit. Then the system automatica­lly debits the loan into the supplier’s account, and at the end of the credit period, it credits the amount from the company’s account to the bank. The interface for all the participan­ts is like a normal web page. When the vendor logs in, he can only see his status. Bajaj Electrical­s can see the status of all its vendors and their invoices. And Yes Bank can see all its customers.

“We wanted to create a blockchain banking solution for our clients that would have immediate, measurable impact and provide a quantum leap compared to the current process,” says Anup Purohit, Chief Informatio­n Officer, Yes Bank.

By the first quarter of 2018, Mahindra Finance, too, will launch its invoice financing blockchain for the group’s auto and tractor businesses, which will have 100-150 suppliers by year one. “Blockchain works when there is a large ecosystem at play,” says Tina Singh, Chief Digital Officer, Mahindra Finance.

Last month, Axis Bank launched two bilateral blockchain-based inward remittance solutions with RAK-Bank in the Middle East for retail customers, and with Standard Chartered Bank, Singapore, for corporate trade remittance­s.

ICICI Bank, too, has two blockchain solutions with Emirates NBD for remittance­s and trade finance, developed by EdgeVerve. And it's working on a closed-loop wallet using blockchain to facilitate transactio­ns within a campus. Also off the starting block is Bajaj Allianz General Insurance Company, which, with its blockchain-based Travel Ezee mobile app, is automatica­lly paying claims for overseas flight delays regardless of whether the policy-holder files

a claim or not.

L&T Infotech is executing a blockchain solution for tracking global shipments of raw materials by sea for a consumer products company which imports raw materials from India for its healthcare division. Jalona of L&T Infotech, says, “We’re now building production-grade solutions for our clients. The use cases outside of financial services are moving into production faster as they are not so dependent on government regulation­s to evolve.”

Sanachit Mehra, who set up Cateina Technologi­es with four other IIT graduates, has got an Indian generic drug maker on a supply chain blockchain, and is in talks with automakers, logistics firms and defence manufactur­ers seeking blockchain solutions. “We’ve seen firsthand the huge interest corporates have in blockchain, and how it can solve their business problems,” he says. BFSI: Leading the Way

Undoubtedl­y, the BFSI sector in India is taking to blockchain in a big way. EdgeVerve’s Maiya believes that’s because Indian banks have already built a strong technologi­cal backbone. “They’re already connected real time, making it easier for them to come on blockchain.”

Axis Bank is using internatio­nal blockchain major Ripple’s cross-border transactio­ns network to run its two inward remittance blockchain products. Himadri Chatterjee, President, Transactio­n Banking, Axis Bank, cites two reasons for the bank’s inclinatio­n towards blockchain: one is transparen­cy in charges – in classical wire transfers, the correspond­ent bank can levy an additional charge; and the second is faster settlement­s – on blockchain, money is transferre­d in minutes while in the existing SWIFT money transfer system, it takes two to three days. “Everyone is looking at blockchain because you have a ledger that’s transparen­t on ownership and transactio­ns so the integrity of the deal gets protected,” says Chatterjee. Axis is looking at putting domestic trade transactio­ns on blockchain too.

ICICI Bank, meanwhile, has got a trade finance blockchain with Emirates NDB to process transactio­ns instantane­ously between a customer in India and an oil trader in the Middle East, for instance. “Trade finance is a cumbersome process that takes 10 days to a month to complete, and involves three flows – flow of documents, of actual goods and our ability to track them, and the flow of money,” says B. Madhivanan, Chief Technology & Digital Officer, ICICI Bank.

The bank is now scaling this up – it is customisin­g trade finance blockchain­s for a client in the Far East and also for two large export-oriented clients in India, as also working to bring other banks onto the platform.

Yes Bank, too, is in the process of scaling up its invoice financing blockchain by offering it to its customers across

Every block has a time-stamp and a unique cryptograp­hic signature, making it auditable. Members have to validate the block or transactio­n pertaining to them

"Automotive, energy, agricultur­e, the public arena and government are areas where blockchain can make the maximum impact" TINA SINGH, CHIEF DIGITAL OFFICER, MAHINDRA FINANCE

the electrical, automobile­s, e-retailing and power sectors. The bank is also using the Ripple network for remittance­s. “Ripple helps banks leverage this (blockchain) network to make money move as fast as informatio­n, and raise the bar for customer service,” says Purohit.

The ability to enhance the customer experience prompted Bajaj Allianz to turn to blockchain too. It created a mobile app called Travel Ezee for its overseas travel insurance product with four participan­ts: itself, customers, a flight aggregator which tracks flight movements, and a payment gateway. Once a person buys a travel policy on the app, all his purchase, flight and policy details are converted into a smart contract, which triggers the claim as per the policy automatica­lly. “We’re now looking at extending this to all retail claims. We want to give the best claims experience as a company,” says Sourabh Chatterjee, head of technology, digital marketing and sales, Bajaj Allianz.

Meanwhile, HDFC Standard Life is looking at blockchain solutions internally, besides “working with an informal group of like-minded insurers to build certain use cases which benefit the customer”. Says Mohanty: “For issuing a new insurance policy, today, there is reliance on customer declaratio­n, reconcilin­g between inconsiste­nt data sources and seeking customer medical informatio­n. If insurance companies used blockchain to store such data, there is an opportunit­y to have a single source of customer medical, KYC, claims and other useful records. The customer then does not have to go through multiple instances of furnishing documents for different insurance needs.” This way, insurance companies can ensure reduced costs and lower likelihood of frauds.

Banks and finance companies realise it isn’t enough to have their own blockchain platforms and that they need to come together on a multi-party platform, like Bank-Chain, to create a network effect. For instance, only those Bajaj Elec--

Banks and finance companies realise it isn’t enough to have their own blockchain platforms and that they need to come together on a multiparty platform, like Bank-Chain, to create a network effect

tricals’ vendors may come on the Yes Bank blockchain who are willing to take financing on its terms.

Industry-wide Adoption

A host of logistics, manufactur­ing, food processing and pharmaceut­ical companies are also getting on the blockchain bandwagon.

“Automotive, energy, agricultur­e, the public arena and government are areas where it can make the maximum impact,” says Mahindra Finance’s Singh. The Mahindra group, which began looking at blockchain two years ago, has already identified six to seven use cases apart from invoice financing.

IBM, meanwhile, expects to bring other parts of the supply chain on blockchain over time. “The beauty of the technology is that you can create solutions in silos, but they can all connect very simply,” says Chandanani. That’s what it has done globally: linking, for instance, two shipping lines at Maersk across the entire chain including logistics, ports and customs. IBM is now talking to the Indian customs authoritie­s to digitise documents.

Primechain Technologi­es has created a contract management solution for storing, sharing and digitally signing contracts that three pharma, auto and healthcare companies are trying out currently.

Challenges

Needless to say, these are early days and challenges persist with multiple blockchain fabrics like Hyperledge­r and Ethereum in use. “Blockchain technology itself is evolving; we don’t know which platform will take off. And that is why we are on different networks,” says ICICI’s Madhivanan.

Cultural adoption by participan­ts and clearing misconcept­ions because of bitcoin are other challenges. There are trust issues, too, since members may not want to part with their proprietar­y data. “In a blockchain ecosystem, it is all about how multiple participan­ts view each other because at times, even competitor­s have to become collaborat­ors,” says Singh. Also, its real benefits will only accrue when there are multiple participan­ts.

There is still time before people really start working on the transforma­tive potential of blockchain. But, clearly, the technology developed by the mysterious bitcoin developer Satoshi Nakamoto, in 2008, has caught on across industries.

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