Banesco Panamá and Scotiabank Chile get serious about blockchain potential after running proofs of concept (POC) with Ripple.

According to iupana, a news agency focusing on how financial services peers, competitors and clients in Latin America are using technology, both Banesco Panama and Scotiabank Chile have recently run proofs of concept for cross-border payments with Ripple.

Executives at the banks told iupana that:

“The tests helped them identify what needs to be done to fully implement blockchain for cross-border payments – and opened their eyes to the potential.”

Banesco Panama

“It gives you traceability, and arrives directly, anywhere in the world,” said Rodrigo González, executive vice president for innovation and transformation, at Banesco Panamá.

On May 6th 2019, Banesco Panama announced that it had conducted a transfer with a bank in Peru, which was not named at the time. According to this more recent source:

“It ran a proof of concept in mid-May, sending a single transfer from Panama to Peruvian bank Intergroup. The test run gave both Banesco and the Panamanian banking regulator a better look at blockchain for cross-border payments.

González said he was impressed by the traceability and speed of the test transfer. The regulator responded by indicating some series of steps needed to make such transfers compliant in the final system. “Now we are working on a minimum viable product,” said González.

Banesco’s proof of concept used the Xcurrent network for the funds transfer, seeing use of Ripple’s cryptocurrency XRP as being a step further than it is comfortable with.

Once integrated into the Ripple network, Banesco aims to initially offer blockchain-based transfers only between banks in the group (covering the Dominican Republic, Panama, Portugal, Puerto Rico, Spain and Venezuela). That’s because Banesco needs to strike a deal on rates and exchange rates bilaterally with each recipient bank.

“Even if I am part of the Ripple ecosystem, I can’t just send a transfer to anyone,” said Gonzalez.

Scotiabank Chile

The second bank to run a POC with Ripple was Scotiabank Chile. Scotiabank (Canada) was one of the 12 banks in the R3 consortium to trial XRP for cross border payments back in October 2016.

“We wanted to use their blockchain technology to avoid intermediary banks when sending funds,” said Daniel Kennedy. The correspondent banking system adds complexity and cost to funds transfers – as well as making the process slower, he said.

“What we identified was that Ripple technology works really well. The bank’s technology was not ready to “plug in” to blockchain and achieve our expected efficiencies. So we ended up having two messaging layers: The Ripple messaging layer, which is only messaging, and the bank’s transfer layer for sending funds. Our transfer layer could not be replaced, in this instance, by blockchain.”

To properly take advantage of the potential of blockchain, Scotiabank needs to upgrade its payments infrastructure, said Kennedy.

“As soon as you do that, the process becomes a lot more efficient, a lot more effective. And you can start having almost one account. If you’ve got a small business in Chile with clients in Lima, they can deposit into an account that has the same number and it just gets transferred. But we’re not there yet.”

We would like to thank XRP community member ×-MächīnƏ-× (@9xMachinex9 twitter handle) for finding and sharing these news with us.