ING aims to take blockchain experimentation to the next level

ING aims to take blockchain experimentation to the next level

Dutch bank ING says it has conducted 27 proofs of concept of the application of blockchain technology in six business areas, including payments, trade finance and working capital solutions, financial markets, bank treasury, lending, and compliance and identity.

The bank has assembled a cadre of technologists, mathematicians, cryptologists, economists and business experts to work on its Amsterdam-based Blockchain Innovation team.

Over the past year it has conducted a series of experiments across multiple business domain, most promisingly working as part of a consortium of ten banks on the ‘know-your-customer’ process, and in trade finance, where it demonstrated that shared ledger technology could reduce operational and compliance costs by between 10%-15% and increase bank revenues by as much as 15%.

Most recently, news hit the wires that ING Bootcamp winner Easy TradING Connect, trading house Mercuria and Societe Generale are working on the first large oil trade using blockchain technology.

Mariana Gomes de la Villa, senior program manager blockchain and leader of the innovation team, says: “For us, 2016 was about experimentation and getting to know the technology: how it works, how we can use it and what the pitfalls and limitations are. This technology wasn’t built for the financial industry so there are constraints and it doesn’t always cover our requirements."

Collaboration with other industry players and regulatory bodies is key, she says, and to this end the bank has with worked with a number of external partners including consortiums such as R3, fintech startups, the Dutch central bank, the Dutch Payments Association and the European Banking Forum.

“Each solution should comply with many more areas: performance and scalability, the regulatory and legal framework, privacy and confidentiality," says Gomes de la Villa. "That’s also why collaboration with the business and external partners is so important.”

Looking ahead, the banks intends to zone in on on five to six practical use cases.

Ivar Wiersma, head of innovation at Wholesale Banking with responsibility for the Blockchain Innovation team, says: “We will introduce more of these pilots and tests that make clients enthusiastic. Not every pilot will be a home run, but that’s OK. I see them as stepping stones, showing us what’s possible.”

Comments: (1)

A Finextra member
A Finextra member 31 January, 2017, 12:53Be the first to give this comment the thumbs up 0 likes

As much as I admire ING dynamic and one of few realistic approaches to blockchain deployments, I still don't see how this this exercise will- in general- extend any bank's life beyond mandatory open access rights and the showers of API's from many industries. Is it like banks are precipitating to their own pipeline refuge by their own hands, thus forgetting about the main battle of existence? 

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