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Hong Kong central bank releases pioneer whitepaper to detail crypto transaction traceability

Hong Kong central bank releases pioneer whitepaper to detail crypto transaction traceability
Daniela Kirova
Oct 05, 2021, 06:33 AM
  • Central bank probing CBDCs as it looks into the potential of the e-dollar
  • Bank researched scalability and performance, privacy, interoperability, cybersecurity, compliance, resilience
  • Distribution models studied were a hybrid model, a direct CBDC model, intermediated model

The city’s de facto central bank is prospecting the potential of a digital Hong Kong dollar for transborder and domestic markets. The whitepaper is the first of its kind published by a central bank and aims to preserve privacy while exploring transaction traceability.

Introducing the e-HKD

Hong Kong’s Monetary Authority, serving the function of central bank, is probing retail central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) as it looks into the potential of the e-HKD. The paper was published yesterday.

Hong Kong maintains autonomous justice and financial systems under the “One Country, Two Systems” framework governing the city. The paper, titled “e-HKD: A technical perspective,” looks into the design and architecture options related to developing infrastructure for distributing e-HKD.

Monetary Authority Chief Executive Eddie Yue said in a press release:

According to the bank, this whitepaper makes history. They wrote in the paper:

The bank researched seven main areas, all related to the pluses and minuses of digital central bank currencies as they affect scalability and performance, privacy, interoperability, cybersecurity, compliance, resilience, operational robustness, and technology-enabled functional capabilities.

The bank said:

Among the distribution models studied in the paper were a hybrid model, a direct CBDC model, and an intermediated model. With a formal request, the bank will be looking for opinions from industry and academic experts by the end of the year. The bank emphasized its purpose was to collect views at this point, not to further infrastructure development.