Ping An becomes first Chinese member of R3 blockchain consortium

Reuters

Published May 24, 2016 04:06AM ET

Ping An becomes first Chinese member of R3 blockchain consortium

By Jemima Kelly

LONDON (Reuters) - China's second-biggest insurance company, Ping An Group, has become the first Chinese member of a global consortium led by fintech firm R3 that is working on ways blockchain technology can be used in financial markets, the companies said on Tuesday.

Ping An <601318.SS> joins a group of more than 40 of the world's biggest banks and other financial institutions, such as Barclays (LON:BARC) and Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS), brought together last year by New York-based R3 to work together on using the technology that underpins digital currency bitcoin.

Chinese financial firms -- some of the biggest in the world -- had been conspicuous by their absence in the consortium.

R3 CEO David Rutter, formerly CEO of electronic trading at ICAP (LON:IAP), one of the world's largest interdealer brokers, called the addition of Ping An "an important milestone".

The blockchain works as a huge, decentralized ledger of every bitcoin transaction ever made, which is verified and shared by a global network of computers and therefore is virtually tamper-proof.

The technology is being viewed as a potentially "disruptive" force that could reduce the role of banks and other intermediaries, and change the way trades in financial instruments are cleared and settled.