
The global push to overhaul cross-border payments is gaining momentum, with the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) announcing new progress in Project Agora—a high-profile initiative aimed at bringing tokenized money into the global financial system.
New trials conducted through Project Agora show that tokenized commercial bank deposits and central bank reserves can operate together on a shared interoperable platform.
The project was introduced two years ago and received buy-in from over 40 private financial institutions. It’s designed to explore how tokenized forms of money, including potential central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), could function within shared financial infrastructure.
BIS Deputy General Manager Andrea Maechler said the latest results represent progress toward real-time implementation, though she cautioned that further testing will be needed before the framework can scale globally.
Maechler also announced that Bank of Canada will join the project, which already includes participants such as the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, Bank of England, and central banks from South Korea, Mexico, and Japan.
A Push to Improve of Cross-Border Payments
Introducing tokenization technology into cross-border payments could be a salve for a longstanding pain point. The correspondent banking system—where a series of international banks are required to complete a single payment—has caused delays, high fees, and lack of transparency to be the calling cards of cross-border payments.
These challenges prompted Group of 20 (G20) to launch a strategy to improve international transactions. Yet many of these issues remain unresolved today.
Driving Real-World Integration
As digital assets have evolved, their potential to transform cross-border payments has become increasingly clear. Blockchain infrastructure can remove layers of intermediaries and enable near-instant, secure settlement at lower cost.
Stablecoins have received much of the focus in the cross-border payments space because they are pegged to fiat currencies and are therefore generally less volatile than cryptocurrencies like bitcoin.
However, tokenized deposits and CBDCs can offer many of the same benefits as stablecoins while operating within a regulated financial system rather than being issued by private companies.
This distinction is critical. BIS General Manager Pablo Hernandez de Cos recently warned that the rapid rise of stablecoins has concentrated significant influence in the hands of firms such as Circle and Tether. He emphasized the need for stronger international stablecoin regulation to mitigate potential economic risks tied to such concentration and underscored the importance of developing alternative payment infrastructures.
The post BIS Ramps Up Efforts for a Cross-Border Tokenized Ecosystem appeared first on PaymentsJournal.