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Treasury & Capital Markets
ADCB launches real-time trade finance on blockchain platform
Bank sees first live end-to-end trade in blockchain with the movement of wheat from Canada to Bangladesh on dltledgers blockchain platform
The Asset 3 Sep 2019

The UAE's Abu Dhabi Commercial Bank (ADCB) has digitized trade finance for its customers using the Singapore-based dltledgers blockchain platform. ADCB reported the completion of its first live end-to-end trade in blockchain, moving cross-border goods for Western Red Spring Canadian Wheat worth US$6.5 million from Canada to Bangladesh on September 3.

ADCB is the first bank in UAE to run the end-to-end blockchain trade finance transaction with full document automation through the dltledgers platform, offering corporate customers efficiency and faster access to cash.

Krishnakumar Duraiswamy, ADCB's group head of trade finance, says, "By joining the fastest growing dltledgers Blockchain platform for cross-border trade, the bank is able to reimagine trade finance for its customers. This private network allows ADCB to service corporate customers in real time, increasing transparency and building cross-border interconnectivity."

ADCB's private network provided end-to-end trade visibility across the entire life cycle of the transaction with authenticated and consented digitized documents at every step. This pioneering transaction involved several trade partners - Islami Bank (Bangladesh), SGS Surveyor, Richardson International Shipping Canada, Banjo Auto Flour Mill Bangladesh, and Agrocorp, a large Singapore-based trading house.

Nitin Jain, head of treasury and capital markets, Agrocorp International, commenting on dltledgers technology, says, "We could potentially reduce our financing costs by at least 15-20% through dltledgers technology, saving significantly on the costs of physically moving documents. Moving onto the electronic system, we are also able to access earlier financing from banks as the documentation flow is much closer to real-time."

The flow mirrors the traditional letter of credit process, involving agreeing the terms, the application, the issuance, the advising, the amendment request and its approval, the document presentation, the discrepancy resolution, and the bill settlement instructions. The efficiencies stem from using a single blockchain network for all participants, instead of relying on multiple systems.

As global trades intertwine and evolve, demands for a networked and collaborative model will intensify. Not only do transactions need to be seamless and safe, clients are increasingly looking for innovative solutions that save them time and costs. Using the dltledgers platform, ADCB is able to offer its corporate customers greater confidentiality, the ability to keep a closer tab on the flow of the goods and documentation, faster turnaround, and enhanced fraud prevention.

Samir Neji from dltledgers says, "We are extremely delighted to work with ADCB to support their trade finance digitisation through the dltledgers platform. We have huge demand for our network from our 50+ traders signed in from UAE and hence our plan to expand into Middle East and Africa. We have over 400 global traders running 3600 live trades and over US$1 billion trade financing performed with more than 30 banks globally. We are very bullish of our partnership with ADCB and the region. The growth and sustenance of the global US$8 trillion open account trade finance market are heavily reliant on the easy availability and robustness of financing mechanisms."

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