Adapt or die: Payments giants partner with crypto firms to ensure security

Published at: Sept. 21, 2021

Institutional interest for digital assets continues to grow rapidly, demonstrating that cryptocurrencies, stablecoins and nonfungible tokens (NFT) are here to stay. At the same time, traditional financial institutions are beginning to understand the dire need to properly support digital assets. For example, although payments giants such as Mastercard and Visa currently offer crypto-enabled credit and debit cards, these companies are also forming partnerships with crypto organizations to enable better security and trust for consumers transacting with digital currencies. 

Shedding light on the matter, Ajay Bhalla, president of cyber and intelligence at Mastercard, told Cointelegraph that Mastercard’s customers and other partners are seeking solutions to ensure that the crypto economy is instilled with the same peace of mind that consumers experience with traditional payment methods. In order to provide this, the payments giant recently announced that it was going to acquire CipherTrace, a blockchain analytics intelligence firm that has developed crypto forensic capabilities for over 900 cryptocurrencies.

According to Bhalla, once the deal with CipherTrace closes, which is expected by the end of this year, Mastercard will be capable of developing more tools to identify, detect, and prevent fraud and money laundering. Bhalla said:

“We see tremendous potential for digital assets, like cryptocurrencies and NFTs, to change our everyday experiences — from the way we pay and get paid to how we purchase products and services and how we invest. However, the promise of technological advancement and enhanced experiences is met with a rising concern of digital asset security.”

Monitoring transactions

Given the young yet innovative nature of digital assets, financial institutions that already support crypto payments will have to properly accommodate for growth. Dave Jevans, CEO of CipherTrace, told Cointelegraph he believes that every financial institution in the world will eventually have to monitor cryptocurrency transactions and risk moving forward. As such, Jevans noted that Mastercard’s acquisition of CipherTrace is a natural fit for both companies:

“CipherTrace has unique products, like ‘Armada’ for example, which integrates intelligence around crypto and banking transactions. We can now go to market together with Mastercard to bring our products to a broader audience on the banking side.”

Moreover, Jevans mentioned that government involvement is an important element to consider, pointing out that Mastercard’s presence throughout the United States, Europe and Asia will allow CipherTrace to work directly with regulators looking to develop central bank digital currencies (CBDC)

Indeed, the need for tools provided by crypto intelligence firms has become greater than ever as countries race to develop respective CBDCs. Recent data from Redfield & Wilton Strategies found that out of 2,500 surveyors, 30% believe that a “Britcoin” CBDC would be harmful to the United Kingdom. Specifically, the study revealed that 73% of the participants would be “concerned about the threat of hacks and cyberattacks,” while others were worried about users’ privacy and government intervention.

In order to alleviate such concerns, Jevans said that Mastercard has developed a CBDC testbed, which he hopes CipherTrace will further advance: “We can work together here, whether it be on financial investigations or with regulators when they start development in CBDCs.”

A Mastercard spokesperson further told Cointelegraph that the company is working with central banks in all regions where Mastercard operates:

“We are focused on fostering public/private CBDC partnerships work with fintechs to enable crypto card options to people who want to buy and send crypto (in partnership with Evolve Bank & Trust and Paxos Trust Company) and tap our blockchain innovation and partnerships to innovate for the future of digital asset infrastructure.”

Next steps

According to Jevans, Mastercard’s upcoming acquisition of CipherTrace ultimately demonstrates the next logical step in bringing cryptocurrency to the entire world: “This is the maturation of crypto into core financial payments infrastructure.” He said that all major payments companies will have to either acquire or partner with crypto intelligence firms to ensure digital asset development; otherwise, there is a risk for failure.

Echoing Jevans, Alex Tapscott, author of Financial Services Revolution: How Blockchain is Transforming Money, Markets, and Banking, told Cointelegraph that the recent decision by Mastercard to acquire CipherTrace suggests that many incumbents see acquisitions as an expedient way to build their capability in this industry:

“I would not be surprised to see more deals like this in the future. Can incumbent payment companies really stand on the sidelines while stablecoins and crypto assets continue to explode in value and become more and more widely used? Today, stablecoin values exceed $150 billion in circulation. At what point does Mastercard or Visa launch their own?”

Tapscott believes that leading payments providers are just now waking up to this opportunity, viewing it as a potential threat to their existing businesses. While Mastercard has been leading the way for digital asset growth through its partnerships with companies such as Circle, Gemini and BitPay, other payments providers now appear to be doing the same.

For example, in July Visa announced that its crypto-enabled cards processed over $1 billion in total spending during the first half of 2021. The payments giant said that it was partnering with 50 crypto companies, along with crypto credit card programs to allow users to spend digital currencies at millions of merchants across the globe.

Jevans also noted that major stock exchanges will also begin to acquire or partner with crypto firms. For instance, Deutsche Boerse, the German stock exchange operator, recently acquired a majority stake in Crypto Finance AG, a Swiss digital asset firm.

Both Jevans and Tapscott said that these acquisitions and partnerships are becoming the norm due to the fact that CBDCs, stablecoins and NFTs are flooding into traditional markets. “I think that as payment companies step into this market, we’ll see more security, privacy and transactional security around NFTs and other securitized assets. Companies are not just thinking about payments anymore but rather the broader picture,” said Jevans.

Education is key

While it’s notable that payment companies are partnering or acquiring crypto companies to support digital assets, Jevans mentioned that integration can be a challenge. Jevans noted that this tends to be the case when you bring together crypto companies with centralized organizations: “Education on both sides will be needed here.”

However, Jevans said that CipherTrace is prepared to help Mastercard employees better understand how crypto and digital assets work, along with how these will integrate into their business model. “This will be a challenge but also a massive opportunity for both companies,” said Jevans.

Tags
Related Posts
Crypto Bahamas: Regulations enter critical stage as gov't shows interest
The crypto community and Wall Street converged last week in Nassau, Bahamas, to discuss the future of digital assets during SALT’s Crypto Bahamas conference. The SkyBridge Alternatives Conference (SALT) was also co-hosted this year by FTX, Sam Bankman-Fried’s cryptocurrency exchange. Anthony Scaramucci, founder of the hedge fund SkyBridge Capital, kicked off Crypto Bahamas with a press conference explaining that the goal behind the event was to merge the traditional financial world with the crypto community: “Crypto Bahamas combines the crypto native FTX audience with the SkyBridge asset management firm audience. We are bringing these two worlds together to create a …
Adoption / May 3, 2022
PayPal to start letting US customers pay in Bitcoin at global merchants
Online payments giant PayPal will start to accept cryptocurrency as a medium of exchange at its millions of global merchants, the firm’s president and CEO revealed on Tuesday ahead of a formal announcement. News broke regarding PayPal’s rumored decision to accept cryptocurrencies early on March 30. Later in the day, the firm’s CEO, Dan Schulman, confirmed to Reuters that the rumors were true and that an official statement would be released imminently. The new system is expected to feature a crypto checkout service where users can pay for goods and services at approved vendors using their stored coins. The system …
Adoption / March 30, 2021
New Zealand has no imminent plans to issue CBDC, says central bank exec
Financial authorities in New Zealand are in no hurry to issue a central bank digital currency, or CBDC, according to a central bank executive. Christian Hawkesby, assistant governor at the Reserve Bank of New Zealand, claimed that the country has “no imminent plans” to issue a CBDC. In a speech on Monday, Hawkesby said that the bank remains open-minded about further progress in money and payment technologies and has actively engaged in CBDC research. He said: “To issue currency that meets the needs of the public, we must take a new and holistic approach. We acknowledge there is much work …
Adoption / Oct. 20, 2020
Central Banks of France and Switzerland announce successful trial of digital Euro, Swiss Franc
On Wednesday, the Banque de France (BdF), the BIS Innovation Hub (BISIH), and the Swiss National Bank (SNB) announced the success of a pilot run of a wholesale central bank digital currency (wCBDC), titled Project Jura. The project aimed to investigate cross‑border settlement with euro and Swiss franc wCBDCs, and launched on a third‑party distributed ledger technology platform. The experimental technology explored in Project Jura first consisted of a decentralized peer‑to‑peer network of computer nodes (Corda) to validate transactions while simultaneously ensuring that all legal, regulatory, and business rules of governing nations are satisfied. Then, there was the tokenization of …
Adoption / Dec. 8, 2021
CBDC activity heats up, but few projects move beyond pilot stage
Government-issued electronic currency seems to be an idea whose time has come. “More than half of the world’s central banks are now developing digital currencies or running concrete experiments on them,” reported the Bank for International Settlements, or BIS, in early May — something that would have been unthinkable only a few years ago. The BIS also found that nine out of ten central banks were exploring central bank digital currencies, or CBDCs, in some form or other, according to its survey of 81 central banks conducted last autumn but just published. Many were taken aback by the progress. “It …
Adoption / May 16, 2022