BIS Innovation Hub Work Programme 2021/22
BIS Innovation Hub Work Programme 2021/22
BIS Innovation Hub Work Programme 2021/22
Establishment
The Innovation Hub was established by the BIS in 2019, with a mission to foster
international collaboration on innovative financial technology within the central banking
community.
The Hub’s mandate is threefold:
1. Identify and develop in-depth insights into critical trends in financial technology of relevance to
central banks;
2. Explore the development of central bank public goods – typically as proofs of concept to be
delivered to central banks – to enhance the functioning of the global financial system;
3. Serve as a focal point for a network of central bank experts on innovation.
The Hub has centres in multiple locations, catalysing collaborative efforts among central
banks, and cooperation, when appropriate, with international organisations, academia,
financial service providers and the broader private sector.
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The Hub’s strategic focus themes
The Hub’s project portfolio has been curated around the key themes identified as being of
critical importance to the Hub and to the central banking community:
Open finance
Suptech and regtech
APIs in the open banking context and
AI/ML, market monitoring, data analytics
related data issues
Next-generation financial market
infrastructures
Capital markets projects, foundational Cyber security
digital infrastructures, tokenisation of
assets, cross border payments and
payment infrastructures
Central bank digital currencies
Wholesale and general purpose CBDC, in-
house DLT capacity
Green finance
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Mapping of projects across existing centres and themes
Central bank money on tokenised Platform for settling cross-border Multiple CBDC
3 CBDC Retail CBDC
platforms (Helvetia) payments using multiple w-CBDC bridge
Concluded projects Existing projects continuing into 2021/22 New projects in 2021/22 i Name of the projects
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Disclaimer:
The projects, including proofs of concept and prototypes, described in the work programme are being implemented by the BISIH for the sole purpose of investigating the technological and practical feasibility of particular
designs and products and should not be understood to imply or express any regulatory policy stance or endorsement by the BIS or any other party.
G20 TechSprint was a joint initiative of the BISIH and the Saudi G20 Presidency designed to showcase the
potential for new innovative technologies to resolve operational problems in the areas of regulatory
compliance and supervision. Outputs: Press release | Video
Regulatory reporting platform: an open-source proof-of-concept and prototype that will enable real-
time data analytics using artificial intelligence and machine learning tools that supervisors can deploy to
use and validate for risk assessments specific to their requirements.
Concluded projects Existing projects continuing into 2021/22 New projects in 2021/22
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Disclaimer:
The projects, including proofs of concept and prototypes, described in the work programme are being implemented by the BISIH for the sole purpose of investigating the technological and practical feasibility of particular
designs and products and should not be understood to imply or express any regulatory policy stance or endorsement by the BIS or any other party.
3 CBDC projects
Project Helvetia, undertaken with the Swiss National Bank (SNB) and the financial infrastructure operator
SIX, demonstrates the functional feasibility and legal robustness of settling tokenised assets with a
wholesale CBDC (proof of concept 1) and through linking a digital ledger technology platform to existing
payment systems (proof of concept 2) in a near-live setup. The experiment should not be interpreted as
an indication that the SNB will issue a wholesale CBDC. Outputs: Press release | Report | Videos: Overview;
Delivery versus payment with w-CBDC (PoC1); Delivery versus external payment (PoC2); Redemption of
wholesale CBDC (PoC1)
Platform for settling cross-border payments using multiple wholesale CBDCs: explores the creation
of an international settlement platform onto which central banks would issue multiple wholesale CBDCs.
Regulated banks and payment service providers would then use the platform as a common settlement
infrastructure, enabling participants to purchase, exchange, transact and redeem these different CBDCs.
Multiple CBDC bridge: builds on the experience of Inthanon-LionRock, a project of the Hong Kong
Monetary Authority and the Bank of Thailand, to study the adoption of DLT to facilitate real-time cross-
border fund transfers and atomic payment versus payment for foreign exchange transactions. The project
also intends to enhance a cross-border corridor network prototype to support CBDCs of other central banks.
Retail CBDC studies the benefits and challenges of tiered architectures for the distribution of retail CBDC
through commercial banks and payment service providers. This project will investigate two architectural
models: hybrid CBDC and private CBDC-backed stablecoins.
Concluded projects Existing projects continuing into 2021/22 New projects in 2021/22
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Disclaimer:
The projects, including proofs of concept and prototypes, described in the work programme are being implemented by the BISIH for the sole purpose of investigating the technological and practical feasibility of particular
designs and products and should not be understood to imply or express any regulatory policy stance or endorsement by the BIS or any other party.
Concluded projects Existing projects continuing into 2021/22 New projects in 2021/22
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Hub projects example – Rio: a cloud-based real-time market monitoring tool
Stream processing engines
Real-time financial data
Cleaning/ Limit order book Liquidity and risk
filtering reconstruction measurement
FX primary
venues Aggregator Real-time alerts
Secondary and/or
other FX venues Dashboard
Market liquidity
Market risk
Trading activity
FX volume data Raw Clean Enhanced Visualisation
data data data data
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BIS Innovation Network
The BIS Innovation Network will enable the Hub to draw on the significant pools of talent
and expertise on innovation that exist throughout the BIS’ membership. All 63 BIS member
central banks were invited to join the Network.
The Network will be member-driven and will strive to be agile, creative, collaborative and
flexible.
As a starting point, the Network established topical Working Groups around the six
strategic themes of the Hub’s project portfolio. These will initially focus on central banks’
problems/prototypes in early stages of development to kick-start collaboration on practical
problem statements and solutions, and exchange views on nascent technologies.
The first meeting of the Network took place on 19 January 2021; Chairs of the Working
Groups were appointed. A second meeting of the Network will take place in July 2021.
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BIS Innovation Network Working Groups Chairs
1 Suptech and regtech Ms Susan Slocum (Senior Manager, Innovation Lab Information Technology Department), Reserve Bank of Australia
2 Next-gen FMIs Ms Siritida P. Ayudhya (Assistant Governor for Payment Systems Policy and Financial Technology), Bank of Thailand
4 Open finance Mr Aristides Andrade Cavalcante Neto (Deputy Head of Cybersecurity and Tech Innovation), Central Bank of Brazil
6 Green finance Ms Sharon Donnery (Deputy Governor, Central Banking), Central Bank of Ireland
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A global force for innovation
Green finance
CBDC
Cyber security
Next-gen FMIs
Open finance
BISIN WG Chairs
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