Ping An, the Chinese insurance giant that built the eTradeConnect blockchain, is modifying the platform to give its 12 participating banks more control over customer relationships.
Frank Lu, head of the blockchain division of OneConnect, PingAnâs fintech arm, and the architect of eTradeConnect, told CoinDesk his team is revising the way businesses submit their data for trade financing from the network. Instead of going to a central portal, they will have to sign up through individual banks.
First revealed in 2017 as a proof-of-concept by the Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA), and formally launched in October 2018, eTradeConnect aims to bring efficiency to the trade finance market in Hong Kong for small and mid-size enterprises (SMEs) while preventing fraud.
Major banks that participate in the blockchain network include HSBC, Standard Chartered, BNP Paribas in Hong Kong, Bank of East Asia, and the Hong Kong branches of all four state-owned commercial banks in China.
The idea is to let one participating bank verify a customerâs credentials based on transaction history and status of purchase orders so that the SME can borrow money, pledging future payments as collateral.
By putting this data on a distributed network, the project is expected to make it easier for a customer to obtain further financing, but at the same time prevent them from borrowing a total amount from multiple banks that exceeds their credit lines.
Currently, SMEs register for the service through a portal run by Hong Kong Interbank Clearing Limited (HKICL), a subsidiary of the HKMA incorporated specifically for the initiative. Then they choose the bank they want to work with.
But this approach will soon be revised, Lu said, in a bid to give banks more control of where corporates could choose to go.
âCustomers have a different goal. They would want more options for financing,â he said, adding:
âBut at the same time, big banks donât want to become a selection button in a drop-down menu.â
Lu admitted that this may not be in the best interest of SMEs, but said that at the end of the day, âthis is a game.â
âIn my view, customers need money, and banks are the ones that hold this money. So eventually itâs a sellerâs market. But the existing model has made it easier to launch the platform and to make it running steadily,â he said. âThe next step is migration to get rid of the HKMAâs portal so that banks will feel more comfortable introducing their customers into the network [via their own platforms].â
Josh Kroeker, HSBCâs blockchain lead for global commercial banking, told CoinDesk that it will be convenient in the future if customers can access eTradeConnect via banksâ own platforms rather than âa standalone portal.â
A spokesperson from the HKMA said in an email response that while the modification is still in the planning phase, the agency envisions bank customers eventually connecting to eTradeConnect through banksâ e-banking systems, open APIs or web user interfaces.
Similar competitive concerns among banks are why Ping An built eTradeConnect using zero-knowledge proofs, a technology that allows someone to prove that they have knowledge of a secret without revealing the secret itself.
After all, just as banks are naturally unwilling to let their customers go to the other side of the street, they are equally wary of disclosing their customersâ information to their competitors on a shared ledger.
âNo banks would want to entirely share the information. Thatâs also why there is always a lot of talks about blockchain, but very few in actual practice,â said Lu, who joined Ping An in July 2016 from IBM, where he was one of the creators of the Hyperledger Fabric blockchain.
Echoing that point, HSBCâs Kroeker said that âdata privacy/encryption is a key consideration during any trade finance platform design, as banks and corporates do not want their competitive trade data shared unnecessarily.â
He added:Â âTechnologies like zero-knowledge proof are very appealing as it allows these validations to occur without sharing commercially sensitive data.â
In fact, Lu claims that zero-knowledge proofs are the only way to make any blockchain trade platform to come to fruition.
âMy thinking and vision for enterprise blockchain wasnât entirely clear when I was at IBM, but now I believe full encryption is the only way out for consortium blockchains,â he said.
Thatâs because in Luâs view the model balances the goals of using a distributed ledger to boost efficiency with letting banks maintain their business secrets.
When a customer submits information to a bank, the bank has absolute control, Lu said, yet when that information is sent out for cross-checking, itâs all encrypted, and no other parties will be able to see the information inside.
For instance, he explained, if a customer has a $10 million purchase order and goes to, say, Standard Chartered to borrow $5 million, the bank will verify the information and then grant the request.
Now, if this hypothetical customer goes to HSBC to borrow another $7 million, Standard Chartered wonât share the customerâs exact information with HSBC. Instead, HSBC will run the customized zero-knowledge proof algorithm to get a simple result of âtrueâ or âfalse.â
âIn this case, the result will be âfalseâ because the total amount goes above the total collateral already,â Lu said, adding thatâs all that HSBC needs to know.
Yet because of the zero-proof knowledge algorithm, neither Ping An nor the banks will have a clear idea of the size or volume of transactions handled by others on the network.
âIf you ask me about transaction volume, I honestly donât know. Ping An is not able to and [would] not dare to get access to this information,â Lu said. âThatâs because each node encrypts information with their own private keys.â
With eTradeConnect now launched and handling live transactions, another key question for the network is how many customers will opt in and how big these clients will be.
To help create a network effect, earlier this month the HKMA announced a plan to link eTradeConnect with We.trade, the European trade finance blockchain built by IBM on Hyperledger Fabric that went live in July.
Both Kroeker and Lu said the technical integration work is progressing steadily but declined to share more details on the timeline.
However, technology may be the last thing Lu feels concerned about.
Rather, to make full use of cross-border blockchain trade platforms, Lu said the key is to onboard clients with scale.
âFirst of all, one single financial product must exist in both networks. And clients on the two platforms need to be sufficiently large,â he said, adding:
âTechnology now is not really a challenge. But for a buyer in Europe, it better have a large partner based in Asia. Otherwise, itâs just better off finding a seller within the same region.â
However, Kroeker said HSBC is taking its time to make sure the technology and product can work smoothly before widely marketing the solution.
He added that in the past several weeks, HSBC concluded two live transactions for Hong Kong clients â one for house-ware retailer Pricerite, the other with global manufacturer Mainetti.
âThe platform is definitely being used. But in terms of wide commercialization, are we rolling this out to 100,000 clients right now? Not yet.â Kroeker said. âThatâs something we want to make sure we are taking feedback on board from these corporate clients and use that to prove this solution.â
Ping Anâs move into blockchain is also one example of how Chinaâs largest insurer is making efforts to sell fintech services to overseas institutions.
Established in the 1980s as one of the first institutions in China owned by both the private and public sectors, Ping An has grown into the worldâs largest insurance company, according to Forbesâ 2018 Global 2000 list, followed by AXA and Allianz.
As internet companies in China such as Alibaba and JD.com have moved into financial services with insurance and financing offerings, Ping An launched OneConnect, aiming to sell technology services, including blockchain infrastructure.
A report from the Financial Times this year said the fintech subsidiary was even eyeing an initial public offering in Hong Kong to raise $2 billion.
Lu said OneConnect is now planning to launch a similar blockchain trade finance platform in mainland China for a consortium of small and medium-size banks early next year. He concluded:
âBy using OneConnectâs technology, we want to create our own ecosystem.â
eTradeConnect launch image courtesy to HKFintech Week