DLT: clearing away the payments debris?

DLT: clearing away the payments debris?

Distributed ledger technology has the potential to ease a host of operational pain points with UK payment systems and could be particularly useful for reference data databases, a report from Whitechapel Think Tank (WTT) suggests.

The report finds that DLT can transform the efficiency of specific operational pain points within payment processing, with each of the most applicable use cases falling within one of four categories: reference data, identity management, settlement and internal bank processes.

On reference data, WTT says the industry should investigate the use of DLT in two specific areas: the UK's Extended Industry Sort Code Database payments reference data database, and a central sanctions register database.

Meanwhile, the report notes the UK's Payment Strategy Forum's flagging of financial crime intelligence sharing and KYC verification as problematic areas. A permissioned distributed ledger could, it is suggested, be a good way to produce and maintain blacklists for AML obligations.

Market settlement is listed as “one of the most documented applications in DLT,” and correspondent banking is highlighted as a particular area for improving settlement. While for internal bank processes, DLT is floated as a way that banks can link all applications so that they and their customers can track payment status in real time.

Read the full report here:

Download the document now 239.8 kb (PDF File)

Comments: (2)

A Finextra member
A Finextra member 03 November, 2016, 09:14Be the first to give this comment the thumbs up 0 likes

What problem with the EISCD does DLT solve?

A Finextra member
A Finextra member 04 November, 2016, 15:21Be the first to give this comment the thumbs up 0 likes

Hi Mark

The main one I can think of is EISCD is deeply unsexy.  DLT might give it some alure.

Seriously though, currently all changes to EISCD are done via Bacs, which is effectively custodian of the whole register.  If it were to be divided up in a hiearchical way - say each bank had "ownership" of its own subset - they could all maintain their own piece of the jigsaw and with DLT there would no longer need to be a single central source of the truth.

Is this solving a real-world problem?  depends on your point of view I suppose?

Would anybody pay to have it fixed with DLT?  I don't have a budget so I'm not qualified to say, but I doubt its near the top of anybody's list.

Trending