Consortium of Japanese firms to test digital currency in coming months, launch in FY2022

Published Wed, Nov 24, 2021 · 09:50 PM

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Tokyo

A CONSORTIUM of roughly 70 Japanese firms, including the country's 3 mega-banks, said it aims to launch a yen-based digital currency in fiscal 2022 after beginning trials in coming months.

The digital currency, tentatively called "DCJPY", will be backed by bank deposits and use a common platform to speed up large-scale fund transfers and settlement among companies, Kazuhiro Tokita, chief executive of cryptocurrency exchange DeCurret which is leading the consortium, said at a news conference on Wednesday (Nov 24).

The consortium, which includes Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Mizuho Financial Group and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group, has been meeting regularly since last year to study ways to build a common settlement infrastructure for digital payments.

The 3 mega-banks have each introduced their own digital payment systems but lag efforts by technology firms such as PayPay - backed by tech investor SoftBank Group Corp - which is not part of the consortium.

The consortium includes other lenders such as Japan Post Bank, brokerages and insurers, and non-financial firms such as Nippon Telegraph and Telephone, Kansai Electric Power and East Japan Railway.

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Some will participate in experiments to gauge such a currency's use in industries ranging from energy to retail.

"A digital currency system built on a bank deposit-backed common platform will fit the central bank digital currency (CBDC) that could be planned and implemented" in Japan, Toshihide Endo, a former head of Japan's Financial Services Agency who is currently a special adviser to DeCurret, said at the Wednesday conference.

The initiative could affect the Bank of Japan's ongoing experiment regarding CBDC.

Policymakers have said that they would work closely with the private sector if the BOJ were to issue a CBDC.

Japan is one of the most cash-loving countries in the world, with many transactions still completed using notes and coins.

Still, the authorities have been keen to promote cashless transactions to increase productivity. REUTERS

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