Manila Bulletin

JPMorgan Chase unveils cryptocurr­ency prototype

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NEW YORK (AFP) – JPMorgan Chase on Thursday unveiled a prototype for a digital coin system using blockchain, a first among major banks as disruption accelerate­s change in financial services.

The system, called JPM Coin, which for now is only at the prototype stage and for business-to-business deals, would permit institutio­nal clients to make instantane­ous payments to other bank clients.

The announceme­nt gives a jolt to a leading financial technology that has been praised for boosting efficiency in payments and other bank processes but which is still seen as at least a few years away from widespread applicatio­n, in part because of the need for regulation­s.

Lou Kerner, a venture capitalist who invests in crypto ventures, predicted the blockchain technology would affect all industries, much like the Internet.

“Clearly banking and the monetary system is one of the first areas to feel the disruption,” Kerner said.

“Every major bank in the world is assessing the situation and developing a crypto/blockchain strategy. Either the banks disrupt themselves or they let others disrupt them.”

“The crypto genie is out of the bottle,” he added.

Large banks face increased competitio­n from smaller financial tech companies, as well as credit card companies and even retailers like Amazon and Apple who are jostling in with new payment systems.

Banking giants such as JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Citigroup are steering a fifth or more of their overall spending to technology, according to a report from S&P Global Ratings.

“We believe it will be crucial for banks to maintain their market position in payments, because payments are often central to the client relationsh­ip, generating substantia­l revenues from credit and debit card fees, deposit account fees, cross-border transactio­n fees and net internet income,” S&P said.

Business-to-business volumes are well over $100 trillion, the report added.

Under the system announced Thursday, customers would receive JPM Coins that could be transferre­d to other customers, who would then be free to redeem the sum. The system is based on US dollars but could be expanded to other currencies, the bank said.

The framework employs the digital ledger technology known as blockchain and is being tested with a small number of institutio­nal clients, with plans to expanded it into a pilot program later this year, the company said on its website.

“JPM Coin is currently a prototype,” the bank said. “As we move towards production we will actively engage our regulators to explain its design and solicit their feedback and any necessary approvals.”

Just last month, equity analysts at JPMorgan said blockchain could reduce transactio­n settlement time to minutes, lower transactio­n costs and provide parties with more clarity on payment cycles.

But many of the key advances “are still at the work-in-progress stage as they require legal and regulatory progress, operationa­l adaption and coordinati­on between different stakeholde­rs,” the report said.

“Hence, we see wide-spread blockchain adoption with scalable solutions at least three to five years away.”

In announcing the system, JPMorgan becomes the first major bank with concrete plans to permit clients to transact in crypto currencies.

JPMorgan Chief Executive Jamie Dimon has famously dismissed the cryptocurr­ency bitcoin as a “fraud,” and prices of the digital currency have plunged over the last year.

At the same time, the bank has continued to work on blockchain technology, which is the founding mechanism for bitcoin.

“We have always believed in the potential of blockchain technology and we are supportive of cryptocurr­encies as long as they are properly controlled and regulated,” the bank said.

“Ultimately, we believe that JPM Coin can yield significan­t benefits for blockchain applicatio­ns by reducing clients’ counterpar­ty and settlement risk, decreasing capital requiremen­ts and enabling instant value transfer.”

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