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FIS, a global leader in financial technology, announced Project Keystone – a network for digital money to be designed and controlled by banks. Developed with six U.S. financial institutions, Project Keystone will enable participating banks to issue, transfer, and settle regulated deposits in digital form, on shared infrastructure they administer themselves.
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Participating banks include Citizens, Fifth Third, Huntington Bank, KeyBank, and M&T Bank. This group represents different charter types and technology providers, reflecting the breadth of institutions for which Project Keystone is designed to operate.
The network will handle real bank deposits in digital form – meaning the money moving through Project Keystone will be regulated and bank-issued – not a new asset class. Transactions will either settle completely or not settle at all, eliminating the partial failures and reconciliation burdens that slow conventional interbank settlement today.
“Banks are the cornerstone of trust in the financial system, and they should define how digital money evolves,” said Jim Johnson, Co-President of Banking Solutions at FIS. “The digital money space has no shortage of technology looking for adoption. What it has lacked is banks moving together with shared administration and infrastructure among financial institutions. Project Keystone brings together institutions of different sizes, charters, and core providers – because a network that doesn’t work for all of them doesn’t work.”
Catch more Fintech Insights : Real-Time Payments and the Redefinition Of Global Liquidity
[To share your insights with us, please write to psen@itechseries.com ]
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