National Post

RBC exploring cryptocurr­ency trading platform

For investment­s, online purchases

- Zane Schwartz For more news about the innovation economy visit www. thelogic. co

Four newly public patent applicatio­ns reveal Royal Bank of Canada is exploring the creation of a cryptocurr­ency trading platform for investment­s as well as instore and online purchases.

The bank is already using blockchain in some parts of its operations; in March 2018, it published a patent for blockchain- based credit scoring and in May 2019, the bank said it was using blockchain to verify client identities. The new patents suggest a wide variety of additional applicatio­ns, including blockchain-based smart contracts and a variety of investment vehicles.

RBC would be the first Canadian bank to launch a cryptocurr­ency exchange or offer its customers crypto accounts.

“I can’t think of one of the big banks anywhere in the world that has a patent that directly relates to a crypto exchange,” said Marc Kaufman, a Washington, D. C.based partner at Rimon Law.

RBC has applied for four patents in Canada and the U. S. that lay out a sweeping vision for how it might integrate cryptocurr­encies into its operations.

The U. S. patent applicatio­ns, which were filed in April and became public in October, discuss how the bank can take advantage of the growing popularity of cryptocurr­encies.

“To individual users, managing cryptograp­hic keys and transactin­g with different cryptograp­hic assets can be a challenge. In some situations, cryptograp­hic asset transactio­ns may take time to be confirmed, and/or may not be compatible or supported by merchant systems or point- of- sale devices,” reads a patent.

RBC did not directly answer The Logic’s questions, including whether it plans to launch a cryptocurr­ency trading platform and if so, when it would launch.

“As part of the innovation and discovery process, RB C, like many other organizati­ons, files patent applicatio­ns to ensure proprietar­y ideas and concepts are protected,” said spokespers­on Jean François Thibault.

Canada has a number of small cryptocurr­ency exchanges, but many have run into regulatory issues. Last week, Vancouver- based Einstein Exchange, which owes customers over $ 16 million, filed for bankruptcy. Vancouver- based Quadrigacx, which owes nearly $215 million, went bankrupt earlier this year after its CEO died in 2018 and no one could obtain the informatio­n on the private key he used to access funds on the exchange.

RBC’S applicatio­ns suggest how it can avoid those kinds of issues, ensuring that private keys are easily locatable, while simultaneo­usly abiding by other regulation­s, like anti- money- laundering provisions. They explain how a cryptocurr­ency fund would allow people to transfer a variety of bundled crypto assets — it offers Bitcoin, Litecoin, Ether and Ripple as examples — from one customer to another by updating the blockchain.

This type of transfer is faster for the consumer than removing a coin from cold storage. It also saves the bank expensive computer processing time.

“Just like a mutual fund makes stocks more accessible, this could make tokenized assets more accessible,” said Kaufman.

RBC is already using blockchain in some parts of its operations. In 2017, the bank announced it was using the technology to move payments between its Canadian and American banks. In May, it said it was using blockchain to verify client identities. But patent filings suggest a broader vision. In the past three years, RBC has published at least 27 blockchain-related patents seeking legal protection for a variety of systems, including credit scores, vehicle records, digital rewards, smart contracts, loan offerings and a variety of investment vehicles.

Earlier this year, RBC CEO Dave Mckay said the bank was looking at tokenizing a wide variety of assets: “We’re experiment­ing with taking an asset and breaking it into smaller pieces and registerin­g that in a decentrali­zed register called blockchain. You can take an asset or even a company and create a unit on a decentrali­zed blockchain and then sell that into the marketplac­e.”

One patent applicatio­n offers specificit­y on what kind of assets could be broken down. “In some embodiment­s, the data structure may represent a group that includes any combinatio­n of objects representi­ng different crypto- assets, fiat currencies, equities, bonds, mutual fund units, other financial instrument­s and/ or other representa­tions of value or physical objects,” it reads.

RBC is not the only institutio­n to apply for these kinds of patents. Bank of America has published several blockchain- based patents in recent years. In July, Goldman Sachs received a patent for a crypto- settlement system. In the past year, Alibaba, Visa and Mastercard have all published patents for cryptograp­hic transactio­n- based technology. RBC’S patents suggest Visa or Mastercard could be used to buy cryptocurr­ency that could then be transferre­d to an RBC account.

While making that purchase, the bank could also automatica­lly convert a cryptocurr­ency into fiat currency if a consumer is trying to pay for something and doesn’t have enough money.

“When there are inadequate funds in the fiat balance, the system is configured to exchange one or more crypto- assets for fiat funds to fulfil the transactio­n amount,” reads one of the applicatio­ns.

RBC’S patents are becoming public as government­s around the world are looking into launching digital currencies of their own. In October, The Logic broke the news that the Bank of Canada was exploring launching a digital currency that could share informatio­n with police and tax authoritie­s. China and the European Union are both considerin­g their own digital coins.

These patents could let RBC trade such government- backed currencies, Kaufman said.

“I would, and you would, and I think RBC would feel more comfortabl­e exchanging a state- backed coin from China or Canada than Bitcoin.”

THIS COULD MAKE TOKENIZED ASSETS MORE ACCESSIBLE.

 ?? Ben Nelms / Bloo mberg files ?? RBC has applied for four patents in Canada and the U. S. that lay out a vision for how it might integrate cryptocurr­encies into its operations.
Ben Nelms / Bloo mberg files RBC has applied for four patents in Canada and the U. S. that lay out a vision for how it might integrate cryptocurr­encies into its operations.

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