Japanese Banking Chairman: Cryptocurrencies Mean New Data Opportunities

Date:

Share post:

A Japanese national cryptocurrency will allow its finance sector to “use data to create new value” not possible with traditional setups.

This is according to comments from Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFG) CEO Nobuyuki Hirano, who is also chairman of the Japanese Bankers Association.

Speaking at a news conference Thursday, Hirano said the possibilities offered by (presumably centralized) cryptocurrencies would also Japan’s finances to “reap the benefits,” Reuters reports. He explained:

“We would be able to capture kinds of financial behavior that cannot be collected as data in cash transactions.”

Japan has rapidly turned on to the phenomenon of decentralized cryptocurrency such as Bitcoinand its controllable alternatives.

A major consumer drive to increase propagation, along with formal regulations for exchanges has increased public confidence in what was previously regarded as a highly niche concept.

While the government oversees its nationwide J-Coin digital currency project, Hirano is also overseeing MUFG’s own cryptocurrency, MUFG Coin, pegged to the yen and currently under trial with company employees.

A cagey statement from the bank read last month:

“…We can only say that it’s true that MUFG is conducting demonstration experiments on the ‘Coin’ within the company utilizing a Blockchain technology.”


spot_img

Related articles

Cyprus registers Binance as a cryptocurrency service provider.

Binance, a cryptocurrency exchange, will be able to provide services for virtual currencies in Cyprus as a result...

More than 24,000 ATMs in Brazil will offer USDT through Tether and Smartpay.

Usdt, the largest dollar-pegged stablecoin on the market, was created by Tether, a company. Tether recently announced that...

To solve the blockchain modularity issue, Celestia raises $55 million.

The project Celestia, which seeks to address the alleged centralization issue in the current monolithic blockchains, has announced...

Hong Kong considers removing the “Professional Investor-Only Requirement” and allowing retail investors to trade cryptocurrency.

Securities and Futures Commission (SFC) of Hong Kong's director of licensing and head of the fintech division both...