Digital RMB Trial Expands to Include First Private Bank
By CHEN JIA
China's digital RMB trial has for the first time included a privately owned bank, indicating a further expansion of applications and the country's firm attitude in driving the pilot program, analysts said.
Zhejiang E-Commerce Bank Co Ltd, which is based in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, became the seventh bank in China to offer the testing of central bank digital currency, or e-CNY. Users can now download a digital wallet through a designated app.
The Ant Group, e-commerce giant Alibaba's financial technology arm, has the largest share in the bank, at 30 percent, and owns the third-party payment platform Alipay.
The inclusion of the privately owned bank marks a new step in the e-CNY trial, said analysts, and the tested scenarios are continually increasing.
Since Zhejiang E-Commerce Bank has advantages in e-commerce, mobile payment and fintech services, it will facilitate the expansion of the testing and the broader usage of digital RMB, said Liu Bin, director of the Shanghai Pudong Reform and Development Research Institute's finance research office.
By the end of 2020, the total assets of the bank reached 311.26 billion yuan ($48.5 billion), and its capital adequacy ratio was 11.89 percent, according to the bank's 2020 annual report.
At the annual conference in April of the Boao Forum for Asia, Li Bo, vice-governor of the People's Bank of China, the central bank, said the authorities are planning to expand trials of the digital yuan, or e-CNY, in more cities and for various scenarios.
"For example, in the pilot program for the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics, the digital yuan will not only be offered to domestic users, but also to international users," Li said.
China's six largest State-owned commercial banks-the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, Agricultural Bank of China, Bank of China, Bank of Communications, China Construction Bank and Postal Savings Bank of China-have all opened digital wallets on the app.
Another signal of the trial's expansion recently is that e-CNY digital wallets offered by these six banks have added applications to pay digital currency to e-commerce platforms such as food delivery service Ele.me.
Some experts said the expansion of the digital RMB's payment system will help connect different internet platforms, including other mobile payment providers such as WeChat Pay.
A research note from Huaxi Securities said that until the end of this year, the e-CNY testing program is expected to speed up, focusing on expanding the scale of users and application scenarios.
The final launch of the digital RMB may change the existing market structure, which is mainly dominated by Alipay and WeChat Pay, and the banks may return to a leading position in the digital currency system, the research indicated.
Liu, the research office director, said the trial program's expansion is likely to promote the international business strategy of China's large third-party payment platforms, since the e-CNY's launch will help promote the internationalization of the RMB.
Large e-commerce platforms' business will likely combine with the e-CNY's cross-border usage and attract global users, according to Liu.
China is seeking ways to exchange various digital currencies issued by the world's leading central banks, which is a complicated issue. PBOC Vice-Governor Li Bo said China is not in a hurry to find a solution.
"We are choosing different options to experiment with various technologies. We are open-minded. The goal is to build a very solid domestic digital yuan and a healthy ecosystem," Li said.
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