Blockchain Experts Discuss: Will Blockchain Be the Missing Piece to Financial Inclusion?

The Singapore Fintech Festival rounded up blockchain discussions on the last day of the festival, focusing on one of the main themes of the event, financial inclusion. 

Discussions sparked in a panel joined by Changpeng Zhao (CZ), CEO of Binance, Weimin Guo, Chief Scientist of the Bank of China, and Vice-Chairman of the Chinese Internet Financial Working Committee, as well as other notable blockchain experts. 

CZ mentioned that there was an exclusion when it came to mobile payments such as WeChat Pay for foreigners in China, adding that cross-border transactions could also be made easier with blockchain solutions.  

CZ also revealed that Binance signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Ukraine government, as a consulting role to advise them and commented: “A government signing an MoU with a blockchain company is quite significant.” 

“Every country wants to lead the financial revolution; private enterprises should be global leaders as we can always do things faster.” 

Guo mentioned that the problem of financial inclusion would be solved by blockchain, as it allows more access to credible data, loans at a lower cost for those who may not have a credit history, real-time online settlements, and equity to small to medium enterprises (SMEs). 

Guo explained that Bank of China is currently focusing on the application in the wholesale banking domain, as the total of transactions has reached 20 billion renminbi (RMB) as 30 banks have joined the transaction platform.  

Since 2016, blockchain has been deployed in Hong Kong for real estate prop trading, from mortgage services to assessing the value of the real estate. By using blockchain technology, Guo said that the surveyors were able to ensure that the information was traceable and allowed for data to be verifiable, which enables the automation of the mortgage process as well.  

When asked about the current regulatory strategy towards blockchain in China, Guo stated that China has been encouraging blockchain technology to be used as a more common technology in other industries other than financial services as well. He said: “A lot of synergies between industries could create value and efficiencies in the industry, by applying this technology, does have advantages.” 

Guo added that the Bank of China currently has 12 patents pending with more than 100 people working on blockchain-related projects. “Everyone is paying attention, and there is a high level of curiosity to look at this tech. China has a lot of success stories and is doing great in the blockchain domain, bitcoin, and mining companies. In the future, we might have more success.” 

Shopify Becomes Member of the Libra Association

Canadian multinational e-commerce company, Shopify, has joined the Libra Association. Shopify will be teaming up for the formation of a global payment network within the Libra Association.

The Facebook-led Libra Association has acknowledged that the Canadian e-commerce giant would be a significant partner in the actualization of the crucial economic participation necessary for Libra to become a reality.

Shopify stated that its move to join the Libra network is based on the firm’s desire to address the unsolved challenges facing cross-border payments. Shopify said: “As a partner of the Libra Association, we’ll work together to develop a payment network, which makes money easier to access and supports consumers and merchants everywhere.”

Shopify does not provide direct support for crypto payments. However, it enables its merchants to accept cryptocurrencies via payment methods through CoinPayments Beta, GoCoin, Coinbase Commerce, and Bitpay.

The firm said that its mission is focused on making commerce better for everyone, and to accomplish that, it devotes lots of time in determining how it can improve commerce in different parts of the world where banking services are not readily accessible to the general population. The company admitted that as online commerce continues growing, it is easy to forget that “the value exchange and payment of goods are not a solved problem.” It revealed that much of the financial infrastructure around the world was not built to handle the needs and scale of online commerce.

Shopify’s statement revealed that improving financial inclusion, “is the reason why we made a decision to become a partner of the Libra Association. This is the step we will be taking to be part and parcel of tackling this global problem.”

Since its launch, Libra cryptocurrency has attracted lots of criticism from policymakers and regulators worldwide. Seemingly due to the intense scrutiny, Libra Association so far has lost eight of its co-founding members, including Mastercard, eBay, Visa, Vodafone, Mercado Pago, Booking Holdings, PayPal, and Stripe, which were meant to be part of the Libra project.

Since the withdrawal of the eight founding members, Shopify is the first organization to join the association. The company is a multinational commerce platform with more than one million businesses in about 175 countries. It is, therefore, poised to bring a wealth of expertise and knowledge to the Libra project.

Image via Shutterstock 

Cardano Working With SA Blockchain Alliance to Free African Enterprise from Politically Entrenched Legacy Banking Systems

The Cardano Foundation has partnered with the South African National Blockchain Alliance (SANBA) in a bid to expand blockchain adoption and bring financial inclusion to the country of 59 million.

According to an announcement by the Foundation on April 7, Cardano and SANBA, a fast-tracking blockchain initiative with government support, aim to promote socio-economic growth in South Africa by empowering people and enterprise against legacy financial systems through blockchain technology.

Breaking Ties with Legacy Systems Entrenched in Politics

Cardano highlights the South African market as a potential launching pad to building a distributed network across the country that amalgamates the networks used by government authorities, institutions and enterprises.

Per the release, “Blockchain technology lets developing nations break ties with legacy banking systems, costly middlemen and entrenched political structures.”

Due to the entangled history of African financial infrastructure and its ties to corruption, Cardano cites blockchain technology as a way to guarantee greater transparency and reduce illicit behaviour.

Together SANBA and Cardano aim to build a digital identity infrastructure that will comply with KYC and AML, as well as boost developing economies through digital currencies.

Laying the Foundation For Africa

South Africa appears to be the first step for Cardano on the continent, as the release stated that the Foundation hopes to boost the entire African FinTech ecosystem.

Last year, the Foundation began its expansion efforts in Africa to build blockchain governance with the aim of future-proofing the continents’s sustainable growth and development which it cites as being “in line with its mission to shape legislation and commercial standards.”

Can CBDC Drive Financial Inclusion?

CBDC, or Central Bank Digital Currency, has long garnered the attention of several nations across the globe. Countries such as China, South Korea, Brazil, and Japan are diligently working towards making their sovereign digital currency a reality, taking measures to accelerate its launch. Meanwhile, the Caribbean nation of Bahamas plans to release the Sand Dollar, the digital equivalent of its national currency, by Oct 2020. Contrarily, countries such as Australia do not consider CBDC to be a game-changer. 

Yet, many dignitaries such as Tao Zhang, Deputy Managing Director of IMF, consider CBDC to be an efficient payment system that would drive the financial inclusion of those who are today left out of the ecosystem for several reasons. According to Christine Lagarde, the president of the European Central bank, the COVID-19 pandemic has hastened the need for digital alternatives for cash. Even though financial inclusion is higher now compared to a decade earlier, there are still 1.7 billion unbanked in the world. What are the reasons behind such a significant number of unbanked people? Can CBDC lead them towards financial inclusion?

Why are 1.7 billion people left out of the banking system?

The majority of the unbanked population is predominantly found in developing nations. Five south and south-east Asian countries, along with two African nations, account for half of the world’s unbanked population.

Source: Global Findex Database

There are several factors that contribute to people being left out of the financial ecosystem. Very often, the underprivileged populace ends up relying on alternate financial institutions that might exploit these people by charging exorbitant fees for their services.

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Source: Global Findex Database

Lack of money is often the reason for not having a bank account

47 percent of the unbanked are out of the labor force. The rest are either employed or seeking employment. Additionally, over 3 billion people globally are either fully or partially out of their workplace due to the COVID-19 pandemic. These people who struggle to make ends meet do not have enough money to open a bank account.

Women are the most unbanked among the unbanked population

Women constitute 56 percent of the total unbanked populace. They often cite another family member having a bank account as the reason for not having one themselves.

Many people have limited knowledge of the significance of financial inclusion

Over 30 percent of those unbanked consider having an account as inconsequential. Additionally, 30 percent of unbanked adults are under 24 years of age. Furthermore, 62 percent of them have primary education or less. So, the lack of financial literacy coupled with indifference towards the financial system has resulted in people being left out of the ecosystem.

Inconvenience to engage with financial institutions is another reason for people shying away from bank accounts

Among the unbanked, 26 percent of the adults consider the cost involved in opening and maintaining the account as a barrier. Besides, for the unbanked populace from the remote places find the distance to travel to their closest bank as a hindrance to open a bank account. Additionally, 20 percent of the unbanked lack the documents that prove their identity and thereby find it hard to open a bank account. Finally, over 16 percent of the unbanked adults do not trust any financial institution.

Can CBDC drive the financial inclusion of the underserved populace?

Cryptocurrencies and Stablecoins are gaining momentum these days. Their usage has been consistently increasing in developing nations of Africa and South America. Daniel Polotsky opines, “Humans are able to transact and send each other money in seconds across the world without an intermediary. If utilized well, this will create a lot more frictionless economic opportunities across the globe, but for this to happen, we must make sure inclusion is prime.”

The Central Bank issued digital currency can leverage the private currency framework to foster this inclusion. To begin with, a CBDC has to have universal acceptance. Second, it should be easy-to-use and reduce costs. Third, it should also be interoperable with other payment methods as well as other such digital currencies.

Burgeoning technology can now reach frontiers never tread before

Today, even though there are 1.7 billion people who do not have a bank account, 1 billion among them do have access to mobile phones and moderate internet. Low-price mobile phones have made M-Pesa, a formidable mobile money service in Africa. Likewise, enabling SMS-based hassle-free CBDC transfers will make it easier for people with lower literacy levels and those who are not technologically adept, adapt to digital payments. Similarly, if using CBDC is made easy, it would encourage those who were previously indifferent, to use digital payments.

Governments and private firms should encourage digital wages with CBDC

Several firms operating in countries with most unbanked pay their employees and contract workers in cash. Instead, the governments of such countries should encourage and incentivize these firms to pay wages in digital currencies. Such measures will foster the inclusion of financially underprivileged people into the digital payments ecosystem. Additionally, women who earlier were dependent on their family members to hold on to their money due to lack of a bank account can now save and spend at their will using just their mobile phones. Hence, CBDC enables financial independence for the deprived people.

CBDC-driven payments should facilitate physical ID alternatives for users to authenticate transactions

Stringent document demands make the process of opening a bank account cumbersome. Alternate options, such as one-time-passwords, PINs, and biometrics, can be employed while transacting in digital money. It will lead to the inclusion of those who, for various unfortunate reasons, are unable to produce valid paper-based IDs.

Providing the benefits of the cash system will draw attention to CBDC

For many, the privacy that cash transactions provide is a significant reason to use fiat money. But, such privacy also facilitates nefarious activities and money laundering. CBDC is a powerful solution to this problem. People should be allowed to transact anonymously for transactions of lower amounts. On the contrary, when they use CBDC for high-value transactions, they need to produce a valid ID. These measures will appease both privacy advocates and regulatory authorities.

CBDC should foster trust in the financial system

CBDC is issued by the governments. Hence, it enjoys the reliable backing that paper notes have. CBDC is often considered safer and more reliable than their crypto antecedents. Additionally, Blockchain, when used to undergird the digital currency, adds trust and transparency into the system.

CBDC reduces the reliance on banks and other financial institutions. It can be the medium that fosters the financial inclusion of the underserved populace.

The Bahamas Becomes First Country to Launch its CBDC, the ‘Sand Dollar’

The Bahamas has launched the Sand Dollar, making it the first country in the world to officially release a central bank digital currency (CBDC) beyond the testing phase.

The Central Bank of the Bahamas has announced the world’s first state-backed virtual currency—the Sand Dollar—with the CBDC now available to all citizens of the Bahamas.

The Bahamas is home to nearly 400,000 residents spread across 700 coral islands and the development of the Sand Dollar was viewed as a necessity for financial inclusion across the sparsely populated archipelago.

The world’s first CBDC became available to the residents of the Bahamas at around 10:00 pm UTC, according to an Oct.20 post on Facebook from Project Sand Dollar.

Residents of The Bahamas can trade the CBDC with any merchant on the archipelago leveraging a Central Bank approved e-Wallet on their mobile device with negligible transaction fees, according to the Sand Dollar website. The central bank selected transaction provider NZIA as its technology solutions provider for the rollout of the digital currency. Sand Dollar transfers are made using smart phones, as most of the population, roughly 90%, of the Bahamas citizens have been using mobile phones since 2017.

The Bahamas digital dollar project was first announced by the Central Bank of the Bahamas in June 2018 as many of the smaller and remote islands in the tropical archipelago are cut off from banking services.

As reported by Blockchain.News, the digital currency Sand Dollar aims to create more financial inclusions among the many remote islands of the Bahamas.

Chaozhen Chen, Assistant Manager of eSolutions at the Central Bank of The Bahamas said:

“A lot of residents in those more remote islands don’t have access to digital payment infrastructure or banking infrastructure. We really had to customize the effort and the solution to what we need as a sovereign nation.”

The Project Sand Dollar pilot was launched by the government of the Bahamas, last year and the digital currency was trialed on the smaller islands of Exuma and Abaco which have a combined population of fewer than 25,000 people. The pilot was hailed as a success as 48,000 Sand Dollars were issued, with each pegged to the Bahamian dollar—which is itself pegged to the United States dollar.

Bitcoin Can’t Drive Financial Inclusion for Unbanked But CBDC Can says Mastercard CEO

Ajay Banga, the CEO of Mastercard believes Bitcoin is unable to function as an inclusive currency for the world’s unbanked as the cryptocurrency is too volatile and lacks transparency.

The CEO of payments giant Mastercard believes that central bank digital currencies (CBDC) will be far better suited to drive financial inclusion than, Bitcoin which he say is still too volatile.

Speaking at the Fortune Global Forum on Oct 27, Mastercard’s CEO said that Bitcoin’s lack of transparency in its origins was a concern along with its extreme volatility make it unsuitable for empowering the unbanked. However, the CEO said that central bank digital currencies are a different story.

Regarding Bitcoin, Banga said:

“I am not a believer in the volatility or, for that matter, the absence of transparency in who is the person who’s involved with that currency. So, that’s why central bank digital currencies, we’re believers in.”

The Mastercard CEO also revealed that the payment giant has a large library of patents relating to CBDC. In addition, it was also announced in September that Mastercard has launched a virtual testing platform to allow central banks to evaluate use cases and test roll-out strategies for CBDCs by simulating a CBDC ecosystem.

Bitcoin remains of the table as a potential solution to financial inclusion as far as Banga is concerned. The Mastercard CEO claimed that the landmark cryptocurrency value was too unstable, and gave a crude example of BTC’s price volatility pertaining to how much coca-cola one could buy changing from one day to the next.

The Mastercard CEO explained:

“Can you imagine someone who is financially excluded trading in a way to get included through a currency that could cost the equivalent of two Coca-Cola bottles today and 21 tomorrow? That’s not a way to get them [included]. That’s a way to make them scared of the financial system.”

Banga reiterated that a digital version of sovereign digital currencies would be much better suited to help with cross-border finance.

Mastercard’s CEO Banga has not ever been known as a fan of cryptocurrency or their lack of regulation and transparency and was reported as calling Bitcoin and crypto “junk” in 2018 by the Times of India—stating that crypto should not be considered a medium of exchange.

However, Mastercard has shown public support for digital fiat currency. In 2019, Senior MasterCard executive Ari Sarker told the Financial Times that if governments look to create national digital currency the payment’s giant would be very happy to look at those more favorably than cryptocurrency. Sarker said at the time:

“So long as it’s backed by a regulator and the value . . . it is not anonymous, it is meeting all the regulatory requirements, I think that would be of greater interest for us to explore.”

Mastercard Holistic Approach to Digital Currency

Despite Banga’s reported hostility towards cryptocurrency—in September 2020, Mastercard’s Blockchain and Digital Assets Lead for the Asia Pacific, Ashok Venkateswaran told Blockchain.News that Mastercard is taking a “holistic” approach to digital currencies. The payment giant is looking at everything from central bank digital currencies (CBDC) to cryptocurrencies like Ethereum or Bitcoin, as well as stable coin options.

After revealing that Mastercard has over 90 blockchain-specific patents—the Venkateswaran said that as one of the most recognizable payment systems on earth, despite its interest, Mastercard works with regulation and many for crypto, the regulations have not yet been in place.

An important way to increase adoption of new payment technologies and digital currencies in the mainstream, according to Venkateswaran is by changing the regulatory environment:

“Regulations are still trying to catch up to a lot of these things. We’re following the regulatory principles, but also trying to see how we can help some of those regulations get formed … As one of the largest networks in the world, we want to make sure that we can support any kind of transaction.”

Image source: Greg Beadle

Paxful to Boost Financial Inclusion with Its First Crypto Debit Card

Bitcoin trading platform Paxful announced that it will be adding a crypto debit card to its financial services.

The crypto debit card is already available for signups and will enable conversions of cryptocurrencies to USD. It will also have the functions of a regular bank debit card – users will be able to withdraw their funds from ATMs and get a checking account with it. A virtual and physical version of the card will be provided, and users will be able to transact with Paxful’s crypto debit card anywhere where major credit cards are accepted.

Financial inclusion for the unbanked and underbanked

Paxful has long strived to provide financial inclusion to the unbanked and the underbanked, and with the new crypto debit card, the peer-to-peer Bitcoin marketplace hopes to further this mission, as 25% of US households are reportedly unbanked and underbanked.

The card will first be released in the United States, but the Bitcoin peer-to-peer marketplace will work on launching it in other regions of the world, as global unbanked/underbanked numbers “have reached a staggering 1.7 billion.”

In order to provide interoperability between traditional banking systems and the cryptocurrency sector, Paxful partnered with Ternio’s BlockCard fintech platform to make the creation of the crypto debit card possible. 

In addressing his goal with the virtual card, CEO and co-founder of Paxful, Ray Youssef, said:

“Access to reliable and affordable financial products is indispensable. Whether looking to invest in education, start a business, or simply manage the financial demands of everyday life, there should be a viable option for everyone across the globe.”

He expressed that financial inclusion has always been Paxful’s goal, saying:

“Paxful has always been dedicated to providing that option, be it to users who are in the platform as a matter of preference, or necessity.”

Amid the disruption caused by the coronavirus pandemic, Paxful CEO Youssef previously disclosed to Blockchain.news that one of the fastest-growing markets for Paxful lay in Africa, with approximately 45% of its platform users being of African descent. In a continued effort to provide access to the financial system to everyone, Paxful has taken it upon itself to educate youths on Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies with an initiative called #BuiltWithBitcoin.

PARSIQ Integrates Chainlink Oracle Price Feeds to Trigger Off-Chain Actions and Trading Decisions

Blockchain monitoring and automation platform PARSIQ has integrated Chainlink price oracles to trigger off-chain actions and trading decisions.

PARISQ, the blockchain automation platform that serves as a multi-level bridge between blockchains and off-chain applications has integrated Chainlink’s price oracles, thus allowing developers to build new automated event workflows based on Chainlink’s secure and reliable price data.

The PARSIQ platform allows users and enterprises to connect blockchain activity to off-chain applications, monitor and secure DeFi apps, create customizable triggers, and set up automated workflows based on real-time blockchain events.

According to the release shared with Blockchain.News, by integrating Chainlink’s price reference data into PARSIQ’s blockchain monitoring and automation platform, price data is automatically fetched from Chainlink’s oracles, alongside the automated workflow PARSIQ’s monitoring platform delivers. This data can be used to automate actions and set up triggers to monitor specific token pairs’ price fluctuations.

These new Events, called “Use Case Streams”, enable developers to use asset prices to implement more complex logic and automation, such as triggers to notify traders when asset pairs reach optimal prices, adding price data to accounting workflows, or conducting other price-based calculations.

Oracles and Reverse Oracles

Oracles are services that allow smart contracts on the blockchain to receive information from external sources.

For the most part, oracles go one way: they feed off-chain data into blockchains. Data is pulled from sensors or other real-world sources. It is verified. It is delivered to the blockchain or smart contract. There is a whole world of possibility that exists with having data move the other way around.

In 2019, PARSIQ launched as a platform for monitoring blockchain transactions, proving its worth by enabling mempool-level monitoring and alerts. Meaning, transactions can be monitored in real-time and forensically tracked even before the blockchain nodes confirm them.

The use cases are immense, and the ability to track on-chain and cross-chain transactions has displayed a lot of potential in the realm of fintech, compliance, and platform security.

Essentially, this ability also makes PARSIQ a reverse-oracle. Whereas an oracle provides inbound data into a blockchain, a reverse-oracle will utilize data and updates from the blockchain and deliver it to real-world applications through notifications, alerts, and APIs.

As a platform, PARSIQ’s work starts when the oracle’s job of pulling data into the blockchain is done. This addresses the challenge that data can be either inaccessible or difficult to obtain from within the blockchain. For example: a smart contract cannot know the events happening in other smart contracts, thus creating information asymmetry or inverted data flow.

Oracles and reverse-oracles thus serve as a communications stack atop blockchain platforms and other technology solutions that developers can throw upon the decentralized network. PARSIQ, for one, can retrieve on-chain data and send it off-chain or cross-chain to other blockchain platforms for subsequent processing.

PARSIQ and Chainlink

PARSIQ will now be actively monitoring Chainlink’s price oracles, thus allowing developers to build new automated event workflows based on Chainlink’s secure and reliable price data.

One of PARSIQ’s core concepts is Smart-Triggers, which can be seen as a workflow that gets executed when a particular Blockchain Activity happens under certain conditions.

The Smart-Trigger connects to a Native Event Stream, where each condition’s matching event acts as an input for the Smart-Trigger, which then activates the workflow.

Native Event Stream of Blockchain Activity-based Events are fundamentally native to a certain blockchain or at least received a status of an integral part of it (e.g., Ethereum Token Transfers). For example, with Ethereum, we could have Transfers, Token Transfers, Smart Contract Message Calls, or Smart Contract Events. Chainlink Price Feeds enable new event streams.

Starting with the Chainlink integration, PARSIQ will introduce a new type of Event Stream called Use Case Streams. Each Use Case Stream will consist of more complex Events representing important and interesting Blockchain Activities.

Tom Tirman, PARSIQ Co-founder, said of the Chainlink integration:

“Users can receive notifications on communication platforms like Telegram or directly to API endpoints via Webhooks. Now, using this newest integration with Chainlink, individuals, startups, and enterprises that deal with blockchain transactions can reduce the complexity of retrieving high-quality pricing information, minimize costs, and save time by building automated workflows based on Chainlink’s widely used price data.”

Tracking prices can be tedious and time-consuming for most users. By integrating Chainlink’s oracles into the PARSIQ platform, users can now monitor and get notified in their personal off-chain applications when there are any pricing changes in specific token pairs they’re following. This allows all types of investors to automate their workflows based on market conditions and assess any risks in their future transactions. 

FUSANG Exchange Lists First Publicly Available Blockchain-Based Digital Bond Backed by CCB

Asia’s first digital security exchange FUSANG is partnering with the world’s second largest bank, China Construction Bank (CCB) to offer the first ever digital, tokenized, blockchain-based bond.

FUSANG’s First Digital Security IPO Revealed

CCB and FUSANG Exchange, Asia’s first digital securities exchange, take the lead to bring to market the first blockchain-based digital bond accessible to global investors

The bond, Longbond SR Notes USD (LBFEB21), is to be provided by CCB Labuan Branch at a discount and will be listed on the FUSANG Exchange on the Ethereum blockchain, supporting trading in USD or BTC. Regarding the digitalization of assets and its connection to cryptocurrencies like BTC—FUSANG Exchange CEO Henry Chong told Blockchain.News:

“There are a lot of people today trading crypto, and there are a lot of people who are licensed to list and trade securities on traditional stock exchanges, but as far as we’re aware, no one is actually directly bridging the two.”

This CCB bond represents the first digital security to be listed on a public stock exchange that is directly accessible to the public. This is an important step along the path towards the adoption of Fintech within traditional financial institutions, and further testifies to the value of blockchain technology in digitalizing traditional assets and utilizing cryptocurrencies.

What exactly is a digital bond?

As opposed to other digital assets on the market, this digital bond is a real digital asset in substance. Mr. Chong explained how the asset works as a traditional bond that has been “tokenized” and issued on a blockchain, as compared to other bonds issued by banks that are referred to as “digital” merely because they are exchanged via a mobile app, but aren’t actually held digitally. The difference is that one asset is fundamentally digital and written into the blockchain, while others are just exchanged via a digital medium.

Financial Inclusion through Digital Securities

The motivation for transforming traditional securities to digital ones lies in increasing their exposure to global retail investors, not just accredited and institutional investors. Mr. Chong stated, “What we’re bringing to the exchange is full transparency in the way that it’s not only a public IPO, but that both retail and institutional investors can buy in on a level playing field…global investors can now benefit from access to an investment previously reserved for only the largest institutions, together with low and transparent fees.”

This also speaks to FUSANG’s stated mission of financial inclusivity, allowing everyone from millionaire institutional investors to retail investors to have access to all kinds of securities and digital assets on a decentralized blockchain.

CCB originally approached FUSANG with the idea of creating a digital bond, which was born out of the recent Chinese financial interest in blockchain technology. According to Chong, CCB was instrumental in supporting their technological endeavor while helping with the legal and regulatory hurdles of the IPO process.

The Start of Crypto 2.0

“Crypto 2.0,” according to Mr. Chong, refers to the institutionalization of digital asset products ranging from securities like shares and bonds, to other assets like commodities and real estate. Essentially, in Crypto 2.0 any exchange of value can be tokenized and represented on a blockchain.

On the idea of “Crypto 2.0” and expanding crypto to include more than just currencies, Mr. Chong said:

“Blockchain based assets like Bitcoin were magnificent proof of concepts where they show that we could use this technology to represent assets, and that we could provide the blockchain that acts as a radically different record keeping settlement. I think assets like Bitcoin are very interesting, but as a company, our focus has always been on securities.”

Using blockchain and cryptocurrency to digitalize value will have a revolutionary effect on our economy, and will greatly enhance investors and others’ ability to transfer value. Chong remarked, “you can use the technology to represent all kinds of assets. I think we are showing the digital asset world, and the financial world in general, that digital assets don’t need to be wild, volatile, and risky things.”

FUSANG Exchange Announces CCB $3 Billion Digital Bond Listing Suspended

FUSANG exchange, Asia’s first digital securities exchange based in Malaysia, announced that the listing of what would have been the first blockchain-based digital bond has been suspended, following a request from China Construction Bank (CCB).

The listing of China Construction Bank’s Longbond SR Notes USD (LBFEB21) was initially scheduled to launch publicly on November 13. Supporting trades in both USD or Bitcoin, the initial public offering (IPO) for digital bond LBFEB21 was to be provided by the CCB’S Labuan Branch and listed on the FUSANG exchange leveraging Ethereum blockchain.

The digital bond was to be launched by China Construction Bank, the second-largest bank in the world. It was anticipated by many, as it would have been the first digital security to be listed on a public stock exchange for trade, accessible to retail and institutional investors alike.

The digital bond issuance was initially postponed to a later date, but after some time, China Construction Bank decided that it will not move forward with the listing of the digital bond, although there was nothing faulty with the IPO.  No further explanations were given. CEO of FUSANG exchange, Henry Chong, shared with Blockchain.news:

“While we are disappointed that this Listing has been suspended, there were no legal, regulatory, operational, or technical issues with the FUSANG platform or the IPO process or filing.”

The FUSANG CEO has faith that the digital asset wave is stronger than ever, however. Though FUSANG has already begun the process of returning investors’ funds, the volume of investor interest in the IPO already speaks volumes about the rise of crypto adoption, in his opinion. He said:

“The overwhelming investor interest and demand for this landmark USD 3 billion program has been a fantastic validation of the digital issuance and listing process that we have created, and it is unfortunate the Listing Sponsor has decided that they are unable to proceed with this Listing (Longbond SR Notes USD).”

CCB originally approached FUSANG with the idea of creating a digital bond, a brainstormed epiphany inspired by the rise of blockchain technology in China. According to Chong, CCB was key in helping with the legal and regulatory hurdles of the IPO process.

Although this tokenized digital bond offering has been suspended, FUSANG is likely to partner with China Construction Bank again in the future, should the occasion present itself.

What is Crypto 2.0?

Currently, the digital securities exchange has been working hard to deliver “Crypto 2.0” to global investors with its unique platform features. The concept of Crypto 2.0 revolves around the idea that securities, digital assets, commodities, and other stores of value can be tokenized and represented on a blockchain; they can be transacted with at low and transparent fees. Institutionalization of digital asset products and access to investment products previously reserved for larger investors will be made available to all investors in Crypto 2.0, on the FUSANG exchange.

Blockchain and cryptocurrencies are sure to revolutionize the economy and lead the technological wave, enabling investors to easily transfer value and transact in a cashless manner.

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