Friday, July 24, 2015

BNP Paribas Testing Plans to Add Bitcoin to its Currency Funds

bnpparibas

France’s biggest bank BNP Paribas is reportedly testing the idea of adding bitcoin to one of its currency funds, a source at the bank told International Business Times UK. The unnamed source said that BNP Paribas has been doing “beta testing” involving cryptocurrency, and the official announcement could come in the near future. A spokeswoman for BNP Paribas told International Business Times UK: “We are looking at blockchain technology and how it can be applied to post trade processes to make things faster and potentially cheaper but it’s all very much projects and it’s all in testing. It’s nothing live.”

BNP Paribas, headquartered in Paris, was formed through the merger of Banque Nationale de Paris (BNP) and Paribas in 2000. It’s one of the largest banks in the world. Based on 2012 information BNP Paribas was ranked as the third-largest bank in the world, as measured by total assets, by Bloomberg and Forbes.

In November, writing on Quintessence, the financial magazine of BNP Paribas, financial securities research analyst Johann Palychata argued that bitcoin and other digital currencies could shake up traditional banking and financial services.

The analyst noted “the slow emergence of an ecosystem to accommodate a broader use of crypto-currencies in the real economy,” and the possibility that large corporations might decide to use the Bitcoin network rather than existing settlement systems.

PYMNTS noted that Palychata’s article, which publicly suggested that “the development of an alternative to the current banking system is under way,” was remarkable because it came from one of the world’s largest banks.

A few weeks ago, Palychata  wrote another Quintessence article on the possible impact and future implications of the blockchain for securities markets. “[The blockchain] is the first successful attempt for a secure and decentralized register,” said Palychata. “It should be considered as an invention like the steam or combustion engine.”

Palychata considers the possibility of a scenario, never mentioned or discussed by mainstream financial institutions, where the blockchain makes traditional operators in the securities market redundant and obsolete, replaced by smart markets where buyers and sellers transact directly without intermediaries and the blockchain itself keeps a public, permanent and tamper-proof record of transactions and security ownerships.

“Investment funds have a good chance of becoming one of the first real banking users of crypto-currencies, providing a standardized platform for international fund distribution,” said Palychata, adding that the blockchain technology behind Bitcoin could bypass the banks that currently act as intermediaries.

The analyst also imagined a scenario where the current leaders remain in charge, but are forced to adapt to the emerging blockchain-based financial technology – a scenario that is becoming closer with the recent blockchain initiatives of companies such as Nasdaq and Overstock. It’s evident that BNP Paribas – if the rumors are confirmed – intends to adapt.

In other news, Société Générale, another French multinational banking and financial services company headquartered in Paris, published a job offer calling for an IT developer to work on Bitcoin, blockchains and cryptocurrencies at its London premises. The bank is looking for candidates with previous IT experience in a banking environment or in a fintech startup.

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