Technology
Blockchain Consortium Looks To Woo Sri Lanka's Central Bank, Regulator

R3 is reportedly looking to recruit Sri Lanka's central bank to join its blockchain technology consortium.
The firm spearheading an international blockchain consortium
comprised of various banking behemoths, regulators and financial
technology companies has reportedly asked Sri Lanka's central
bank to join the syndicate.
New York-based start-up R3's consortium currently has more than
80 fee-paying members, including
Singapore's financial regulator, one of Hong Kong's watchdogs
and South Korea's central bank.
Now, according to media reports, the firm has invited Sri Lanka's
central bank to join it and the consortium's members on creating
blockchain-based solutions that seek to streamline certain
elements of financial services operations.
“The meeting with Sri Lanka's central bank was about developments
in blockchain technology, what R3 is doing, and we also extended
an invitation to the central bank if they would like to join,”
Niki Ariyasinghe, project strategy director at R3, reportedly
said. “From a regulatory perspective, there are no charges or
anything like that because we want them involved.
“We had a very positive discussion with the central bank governor
and we will follow up in the coming weeks.”
Blockchain technology, a virtual distributed ledger of
transactions shared peer-to-peer, can record ownership across a
public network of computers rendered tamper-proof by advanced
cryptography. It is already known as the platform for the
controversial digital currency bitcoin, even though this is only
one of several hundred applications that use blockchain
technology.
The technology is causing a stir within the financial services
sector as its supporters believe it could reduce hidden expenses
in the financial system by ousting inefficiencies across areas
such as payments, syndicated loans and equity clearing.
But last November, a raft of big banks that included Goldman
Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Santander and National Australia Bank
abandoned R3's consortium before the first round of funding
commenced.
R3 lowered the initial amount it aimed to raise through its
first round of equity funding from $200 million to $150 million.
The firm planned to give members a 60 per cent equity stake in
exchange for the capital.
Last year, a source close to the process at Goldman Sachs told
this publication the group quickly became “saturated” as new
members poured in, which resulted in a lack of headway and the
project's prospects eventually became “unrealistic”. The bank
baulked at being asked to contribute to funding alongside a
plethora of other investors and was subsequently exploring other
blockchain models, this publication understood.
Santander, the Spanish lender, also dropped out for similar
reasons, as the firm was testing “more relevant and more
attractive” blockchain technology projects and proposals, which
included internal models, a source close to the matter told this
publication.
Still, R3 is not the only blockchain consortium that has piqued
banks' interest.
Earlier this month, a wave of banking giants including JP Morgan,
UBS and Credit Suisse, along with more than two dozen other
companies,
formed a new blockchain syndicate in a push by financial
services firms to make use of the nascent technology.
Ethereum, founded in 2013 by cryptocurrency researcher Vitalik
Buterin, is a blockchain-based software platform that allows
developers to build decentralised applications. While the bitcoin
blockchain is used to track ownership of digital currency, the
Ethereum blockchain focuses on running the programming codes of
decentralised applications.
The Enterprise Ethereum Alliance will work to enhance the
privacy, security and scalability of the Ethereum blockchain with
the goal of making it better suited to business applications,
according to media reports, citing the founding companies as
sources.
Members of the 30-strong syndicate also include Accenture, BP,
Thomson Reuters, Microsoft and Intel.
This publication will continue to monitor advancements within the
blockchain sector and will update coverage accordingly.