The United States-based investment bank JPMorgan is expanding the implementation of one of its major blockchain projects, JPM Coin, into traditional banking.
JPMorgan has deployed its blockchain-based payment system, JPM Coin, to introduce euro-denominated payments for corporate clients, Bloomberg reported on June 23.
According to Basak Toprak, JPMorgan’s head of Coin Systems for Europe Middle East and Africa, JPM Coin went live with euro transactions on June 21. Germany’s conglomerate Siemens AG conducted the first euro payment on the platform, Toprak said.
The system enables wholesale payments such clients, including large multinational firms, to transfer euros to and from their JPMorgan accounts instantly and 24/7. That brings a significant improvement in comparison to traditional banking transactions, which are usually processed only during business hours.
“There are cost benefits to paying at the right time,” JPMorgan’s Toprak said. “This could mean they could earn more interest income on their deposits,” he added.
Launched in 2019, JPM Coin is a live blockchain application aiming to provide an alternative payment rail running on blockchain. Since launch, JPMorgan reportedly processed about $300 billion of transactions in JPM Coin. The bank is yet to scale the system as its overall daily payments volumes reportedly amount to roughly $10 trillion.
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JPM Coin is part of JPMorgan’s blockchain-based platform known as Onyx Coin Systems. As previously reported, JPMorgan launched Onyx in 2020, aiming to improve the quality of wholesale payment transactions. The bank reportedly processed nearly $700 billion in short-term loan transactions via Onyx as of April 2023.
The news comes amid JPMorgan reportedly getting fined $4 million by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission over mismanagement of internal communications. In 2019, the bank reportedly mistakenly deleted about 47 million emails of its retail banking group dated from Jan. 1 to April 23, 2018. According to U.S. securities laws, financial firms are required to keep business records for three years.
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