BOJ confirms blockchain-based central bank settlement experiment
Japan’s central bank confirmed it will conduct a blockchain-based settlement experiment using central bank currency, according to the bank of Japan (https://www.boj.or.jp/en/about/press/koen2024/ko241213a.htm?utmsource=openai). The test will examine whether distributed ledgers can support high-assurance wholesale settlement.
The initiative aligns with global exploration of unified ledgers and tokenized deposits that seek to embed money, assets, and rules on a shared platform. It is framed as technical experimentation rather than production rollout.
Officials have signaled there is no commitment to issue a retail digital yen CBDC at this stage. Any policy move would be contingent on public consultation and institutional readiness.
Settlement finality, the legal certainty that a completed payment cannot be revoked, is the anchor of modern payment systems. In Japan’s two‑tier structure, cash and central bank account balances provide that finality; any new ledger must preserve it.
Unified ledgers like those explored in Project Agorá would place central and commercial bank money on a shared DLT to enable atomic settlement and programmability, according to the Bank for International Settlements (https://www.bis.org/review/r240306a.htm?utm_source=openai). The model aims to reduce reconciliation frictions and could support safer cross‑border delivery‑versus‑payment.
Leadership has cautioned that any DLT used for core settlement must satisfy demanding thresholds for throughput, governance, and legal enforceability. “There are significant challenges: processing large numbers of transactions, ensuring settlement finality, managing legal/operational risks in smart contracts, and ensuring appropriate governance,” said Kazuo Ueda, Governor, in public remarks.
In the near term, payments firms and banks may join controlled testbeds to map interfaces, wallets, and operating rules. Findings could inform upgrades to real‑time gross settlement and securities settlement plumbing without implying immediate production use.
Commercial banks are likely to trial tokenized deposits for intraday liquidity and programmable workflows on shared rails. Risk and compliance teams will assess how privacy controls, audit, and supervisory access translate to ledger‑based designs.
Cross‑border experiments may prioritize interoperability, including guardrails for atomic PvP/DvP and messaging standards that link domestic pilots to initiatives like Project Agorá and the Regulated Liability Network. Outcomes would guide subsequent pilots, not automatic rollout.
At the time of this writing, XRP (XRP) trades at 1.37 with volatility of 5.47% (High) and RSI 14 at 43.67 (Neutral). Sentiment is Bearish; SMA50 is 1.64 and SMA200 is 2.24, with 12/30 green days.
How Project Agorá and RLN compare to stablecoins
Tokenized deposits vs private stablecoins: governance, privacy, oversight
Tokenized deposits are claims on regulated banks recorded on a ledger, inheriting bank supervision, deposit insurance frameworks, and prudential oversight. Private stablecoins rely on issuer reserves and disclosures, creating heterogeneous governance and redemption risk.
Privacy and compliance also diverge. Bank‑issued tokens can embed auditable access controls for supervisors and counterparties, whereas stablecoin designs vary widely across KYC/AML, data retention, and transaction screening.
Cross-border efficiency gains and interoperability versus fragmentation risks
Unified ledgers promise atomic settlement across currencies and assets, potentially compressing correspondent chains and reducing trapped liquidity. But without shared standards, multiple ledgers could fragment liquidity and complicate legal finality across jurisdictions.
Interoperability layers, clear governance, and harmonized compliance are therefore prerequisites for safe efficiency gains. Absent these, operational and jurisdictional risks could offset programmability benefits.
FAQ about Project Agorá
Is Japan launching a digital yen CBDC, and what is the timeline and decision process?
No decision has been taken. Technical experiments continue, and any issuance would follow public consultation and institutional review rather than a fixed timeline.
How would settlement finality be guaranteed on a blockchain or unified ledger used by the BOJ?
By anchoring ledger settlement to central bank liabilities and legal frameworks, with atomic settlement, robust governance, and integration to RTGS-grade operational controls.
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Source: https://coincu.com/blockchain/digital-yen-advances-as-boj-tests-agora-settlement-finality/


