Yazılar

China-Led Digital Currency Platform Sees Rapid Growth in Cross-Border Use

Transactions on a China-backed cross-border digital currency platform have surged past $55 billion, signaling growing momentum behind efforts to reduce reliance on dollar-based global payment systems, according to a new report.

Analysis by the Atlantic Council shows that the prototype platform, known as mBridge, has now processed more than 4,000 cross-border transactions. The project is being tested by central banks in China, Hong Kong, Thailand, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.

The cumulative transaction value reached $55.5 billion, representing an increase of roughly 2,500 times since the platform’s early testing phase in 2022. The digital yuan accounted for an estimated 95% of total transaction volume, underlining China’s dominant role in the system.

The digital yuan, also known as e-CNY, remains the world’s largest live central bank digital currency experiment. Recent figures from the People’s Bank of China showed the e-CNY has processed more than 3.4 billion transactions worth around 16.7 trillion yuan ($2.4 trillion), an increase of over 800% compared with 2023.

Chinese state media reported last month that holders of the e-CNY will begin earning interest on balances held in digital wallets or bank accounts later this year, a move widely interpreted as an effort to encourage broader adoption.

“Taken together, these developments point to a gradual expansion of the yuan’s internationalization through digital infrastructure,” said Alisha Chhangani, a policy analyst at the Atlantic Council.

Picture background

THE RACE IS ON
The rapid progress of mBridge is being closely monitored by policymakers worldwide. The project was originally overseen by the Bank for International Settlements, but the Switzerland-based institution unexpectedly withdrew from the initiative in late 2024.

While not a direct competitor, the BIS has since shifted its focus to a separate cross-border payments project involving seven major central banks, including the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the European Central Bank (via the Banque de France), the Bank of Japan, Swiss National Bank and Bank of England. That group said this week it is accelerating testing in collaboration with more than 40 large commercial banks.

Despite that, mBridge remains well ahead in terms of real-world usage. In November, the UAE Ministry of Finance and the Dubai Department of Finance completed the first government transaction using a wholesale digital dirham on the platform.

Chhangani said mBridge is likely to increasingly target trade settlements, particularly in energy and commodities, sectors where China already plays a central commercial role. Rather than directly displacing the U.S. dollar, she said, the platform is creating parallel settlement infrastructure that reduces dependence on existing dollar-based systems.

“Project mBridge is unlikely to challenge dollar dominance outright, but it may incrementally erode it,” she said.

The People’s Bank of China did not immediately respond to requests for comment outside business hours.

ECB Chooses AI Startup Feedzai to Combat Fraud in Upcoming Digital Euro

The European Central Bank (ECB) has selected Portuguese artificial intelligence firm Feedzai to develop fraud-prevention systems for its planned digital euro, a project intended to strengthen Europe’s financial independence from U.S. payment networks and dollar-backed stablecoins.

The contract—valued at up to €237.3 million ($278.7 million)—was announced Thursday as part of a broader package of agreements advancing the digital euro initiative. Under the four-year deal, which could extend up to 15 years, Feedzai and its subcontractor PwC will create an AI-powered fraud scoring system capable of analyzing transactions for suspicious patterns based on user behavior, history, and interactions.

This technology will assist payment service providers in determining whether to approve or flag digital euro transactions—essentially, transfers between central bank–backed electronic wallets.

The ECB also awarded four additional contracts, ranging from €27.6 million to €220.7 million, to firms including Capgemini, which will support different technological and operational aspects of the digital currency ecosystem. Under these framework agreements, the ECB will only pay contractors once project implementation begins.

While the central bank continues to await legislative approval for the digital euro, officials describe it as a strategic response to Visa and Mastercard’s dominance in European payments and the rising influence of U.S.-linked stablecoins promoted under former President Donald Trump. If approved by mid-2026, the digital euro could be launched as early as 2029.

Feedzai, headquartered in Portugal, already monitors more than $8 trillion in global transactions annually, serving clients such as Novobanco and Wio Bank in Abu Dhabi. On the same day as the ECB announcement, Feedzai disclosed an additional $75 million in funding from Lince Capital, Iberis Capital, and Explorer Investments, signaling strong investor confidence in its role within Europe’s financial digitization push.

The partnership marks a major milestone in the ECB’s effort to balance innovation with financial security, ensuring that the future digital euro remains as safe as cash—but smarter.

Australia advances testing of wholesale central bank digital currency

Australia’s central bank, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA), announced on Thursday it is advancing its exploration of a wholesale central bank digital currency (CBDC) through “Project Acacia,” which involves real money and assets for the first time. The project will test 19 pilot cases across multiple asset classes and five proof-of-concept trials with simulated transactions.

The pilots cover fixed income, private markets, trade receivables, and carbon credits. Settlement assets tested will include CBDCs, stablecoins, bank deposit tokens, and innovative uses of commercial banks’ existing deposits at the RBA. The trials will use platforms like Hedera, Redbelly, R3 Corda, and Canvas Connect over the next six months, with findings expected by mid-2026.

Brad Jones, RBA assistant governor overseeing the financial system, said the initiative aims to evaluate how innovations in central bank and private digital money, alongside payments infrastructure, can enhance the functioning of wholesale financial markets in Australia.

The RBA is focusing solely on wholesale applications, having determined there is no significant economic benefit for a retail CBDC at this stage. Expected advantages include reduced counterparty and operational risks, improved collateral efficiency, greater transparency and auditability, and lower costs for institutions and customers.