The BLOOM initivate builds upon the authorityâs earlier efforts under Project Orchid
[SINGAPORE] The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) on Thursday (Oct 16) announced a new initiative to extend settlement capabilities offered by financial institutions.
Through the Borderless, Liquid, Open, Online, Multi-currency (BLOOM) initiative, MAS will âcollaborate with the financial industry to enable settlement in tokenised bank liabilities and well-regulated stablecoins⊠through standardised approachesâ.
âBLOOM caters to the growing interest among private-sector participants in tokenised bank liabilities and well-regulated stablecoins as settlement assets,â said the authority.
Singapore banks have been accelerating their push into asset tokenisation.
Tokenisation refers to the process of converting a real-world asset, such as a traditional deposit, into a digital representation or âtokenâ on a shared ledger. Such tokens are expected to speed up transactions and enhance the liquidity of assets.
Stablecoins, too, are receiving increased interest. A stablecoin is a form of cryptocurrency designed to maintain a stable value relative to a certain asset, giving it far lower volatility than other cryptocurrencies.
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JPMorgan estimates that the stablecoin market, currently valued at US$250 billion, is set to grow two to three times by 2028.
MAS said BLOOM builds upon earlier efforts under Project Orchid, which âexplored use cases for a digital Singapore dollar and the infrastructure required to support itâ.
More than 10 trials have been conducted as part of Project Orchid since its establishment in 2021. MAS said participating financial institutions have âtranslated their learnings into market-ready commercial offeringsâ. These include DBSâ system for issuing digital vouchers with conditions, which uses the blockchain and smart contracts.
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Kenneth Gay, chief fintech officer at MAS, said BLOOM takes the work done under Project Orchid further, âenhancing the range of settlement asset options for participantsâ.
BLOOM encompasses multiple currencies, such as G10 and Asian currencies; domestic and cross-border payment settlement; and wholesale use cases such as corporate treasury management, trade finance and agentic payments.
The initiativeâs members include local banks DBS, OCBC and UOB, foreign banks including Standard Chartered and JP Morgan, as well as crypto exchange Coinbase, XSGD issuer StraitsX, and USDC issuer Circle. Singapore investment company Temasek is also a member.
MAS said BLOOMâs initial focus areas will include the distribution and clearing of settlement assets. This is aimed at coordinating disparate networks and enabling the âseamless use, transfer and redemption of different forms of settlement assetsâ.
Another focus area is the use of programmable controls for standardised mechanisms in compliance checks; the authority said this will enable âmore consistency in implementations and lower cost of complianceâ.
Finally, BLOOM will explore agentic payments: the use of artificial intelligence agents that execute transactions automatically within pre-defined limits and conditions. The aim of this, MAS said, is to âoptimise costs by timing transfers to when conditions are most favourableâ and reduce the burden of manual payment management.
MAS said it âlooks forward to partner additional financial institutions, industry partners and fellow regulatory bodies to advance BLOOMâs objectivesâ. It added that entities keen to collaborate or conduct trials may express their interest to do so.