12/09/2014 | Permalink | Comments (0)
&xxx
In its second meeting, on 1 December 2014, the Euro Retail Payments Board (ERPB), a multi-stakeholder group chaired by the European Central Bank (ECB), decided to step up work on the topics of instant payments in euro, and person-to-person mobile payments and contactless payments.
[From Finextra: Immediate payments 'next frontier' for European integration - ECB]
The idea of a euro-FPS
12/09/2014 | Permalink | Comments (0)
This is just of the many ideas I have for the Chancellor, so I would appreciate all of your support in trying to convince him to make me the UK payment supremo, the head of the soon-to-be-created regulator for the payments industry, PayCom. I offer a progressive campaign that will not only see cheques at the heart of UK plc for all time but will also see the Queen's head on currency replaced by Dot Cotton from Eastenders, the introduction of a 99p coin so that we don't end up with all those pennies in our change and a £1,000 note that will persuade the world's drug dealers and money launderers to stop making indefinite interest-free loans to the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank, and make indefinite interest-free loans to the Bank of England instead. Only one of these ideas is stolen from an old manifesto from the Monster Raving Looney Party, by the way. I'm all about the future.
xxx
Barclays Bank says it will begin pilot trials of remote cheque deposit technology 'early in the New year'.
[From Finextra: Barclays to pilot mobile cheque deposits as UK Government proposes rule change]
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Ahead of Christmas, Barclays is giving one million customers the ability to pay in cheques remotely by taking photographs with their phones. Barclays has been piloting the service with a few thousand customers since June, when the UK government decided to push ahead with legislation that lets banks and building societies process cheque images - rather than the physical paper - for the first time.
With the technology getting a positive response from customers - 90% say that it enables them to do everything they want - it is being rolled out to one million Premier Account holders
[From Finextra: Barclays extends cheque imaging pilot to one million customers]
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The British government (inexplicably) want “cheques to have a crucial role in the ongoing success of the UK”. I don’t understand why and I strongly suspect they don’t either.
[From Cheques and checks are both going nowhere]
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12/07/2014 | Permalink | Comments (0)
Cuius regio, eius pecunia
“In order to remain anonymous, ISIL may most likely be settling transactions for smuggled oil in U.S. dollars or the local currency of a cash-intensive economy,”
[From Islamic State to Mint Gold Coins - MoneyBeat - WSJ]
Lorem ipsum dolor facet.
The “Treasury Department” of the jihadist group that is now occupying large portions of Syria and Iraq announced Thursday that it plans to mint its own currency out of gold, silver and copper.
The goal: To break away from the “satanic usury-based global economic system” and instead use a currency that’s “based on the inherent value of the metals,” the group said in a statement that was distributed on Twitter,
[From Islamic State to Mint Gold Coins - MoneyBeat - WSJ]
Lorem imsum.
The “Treasury Department” of the jihadist group that is now occupying large portions of Syria and Iraq announced Thursday that it plans to mint its own currency out of gold, silver and copper.
The goal: To break away from the “satanic usury-based global economic system” and instead use a currency that’s “based on the inherent value of the metals,” the group said in a statement that was distributed on Twitter,
[From Islamic State to Mint Gold Coins - MoneyBeat - WSJ]
Why on Earth are regulators chasing their tails on Bitcoin when it is US Federal Reserve banknotes that wreak havoc wherever they go? I noted in an article about corruption in Afghanistan that
Washington made the problem worse by inundating Afghanistan with more cash than it could absorb in legitimate channels to undertake needed reforms;
[From Joint Chiefs report admits U.S. military made Afghanistan’s corruption worse: Graft, not the Taliban, defeated the U.S. campaign.]
In a newspaper story like this, "cash" is usually a simple word inserted to mean money of a variety of forms (bank-created credit, central bank-issued currency and so on). But in this particular case, when they say "cash" they mean it absolutely literally. I wrote about this four years ago.
Interestingly, when he says “bags of cash” he isn’t speaking metaphorically: they actually do give him bags of cash
[From Cash means a lot of baggage - Tomorrow's Transactions]
All of which leaves me wondering why the US choose to work in cash. M-PAISA went live in Afghanistan years ago, and the US could (I'm pretty sure) have simply insisted that all contractors were paid by mobile money to a rudimentary audit trail in place.
11/15/2014 | Permalink | Comments (0)