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SWIFT Pilot Allows Tokenized Deposits Over Weekends
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SWIFT Pilot Allows Tokenized Deposits Over Weekends

L'essentiel

  • SWIFT's new blockchain-based ledger pilot allows 17 global banks to transfer tokenized deposits on weekends, improving client experience and liquidity efficiency.
  • Major institutions like Citi, HSBC, and Wells Fargo are participating, though ultimate settlement still relies on legacy systems.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

SWIFT is piloting a blockchain-based ledger allowing 17 global banks to transfer tokenized deposits over weekends, aiming to improve client experience and liquidity efficiency.

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In brief

Swift’s pilot allows 17 global banks to transfer tokenized deposits on weekends, but ultimate settlement still relies on legacy, business-hour systems.

Participating institutions include major Global Systemically Important Banks such as Citi, HSBC, BNY, and Wells Fargo.

Though built with Ethereum-compatible architecture, the blockchain-based ledger remains a largely centralized network.

Swift, the financial gatekeeper connecting thousands of banks across the globe, said on Thursday that a dozen-plus institutions are preparing to use its “blockchain-based ledger.”

The member-owned cooperative, which has functioned as the traditional financial system's backbone for decades, expects 17 banks across six continents to participate in a pilot program involving the exchange of tokens that represent deposits, according to an announcement.

Highlighting the pilot’s potential weight, the participating institutions include several banks designated as Global Systemically Important Banks by the Financial Stability Board, such as BNP Paribas, BNY, Citi, HSBC, Standard Chartered, UBS, and Wells Fargo.

While ultimate fiat settlement still relies on legacy systems during business hours, Swift noted that its blockchain-based ledger allows banks to move tokenized deposits “overnight and on weekends,” a feature inherent to all networks operating in the cryptocurrency realm.

“Banks benefit from improved client experience and global liquidity efficiency without compromising compliance, credit, risk and control standards embedded in existing payment processing,” Swift added.

The announcement reflects the ways in which traditional financial intermediaries are adopting blockchain in a manner that suits their existing businesses, while embracing the efficiencies that Wall Street executives have pointed to for years.

“We are redefining cross-border payments with Swift’s new blockchain-based ledger—combining tokenized deposits with our global network to deliver instant, always-on money movement,” Mahesh Kini, global head of cash management at Standard Chartered, said.

In a March blog post, Swift said its network features architecture compatible with the Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM), the software environment underpinning one of crypto’s go-to permissionless networks. Still, Swift’s network is largely centralized. It operates a shared environment for transactions, while banks maintain authority over their own assets.

Networks like XRP Ledger (XRPL) were designed to be a cheaper, faster alternative to Swift’s technology stack, specifically targeting slow settlement speeds. More recently, Canton Network has gained momentum among financial institutions by balancing compliance with privacy.

Questions ouvertes

  • Will legacy systems be fully replaced?
  • What are the long-term cost implications?

Sujets liés

This article was originally published by Decrypt.

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