Thursday, 13 August 2020

Update on CIPS China – Impressive Progress But .

 

Back some four years ago there was a great deal of ideologically-driven hysteria from the usual sources that the creation of China’s Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS) sounded the death knell for the US dollar.

I wrote a post then that “put a finger in that optic”.

Four years later it’s time for an update.

Summary

CIPS has come a long way since 2015, but still lags US dollar cross-border payment systems. Also it lags the existing cross border RMB payment system CHATS in Hong Kong, as a forthcoming post will demonstrate.

Analysis

From 2016 through 2019 CIPS has grown remarkably both in terms of value (648%) and number (678%) of transactions.




In 1Q2020, CIPS processed 444,000 payments equivalent to US$ 1.37 trillion. It seems poised to post a 12% increase over 2019.

Over its “life” there has been an equally impressive growth in number of participants.

There are two types of participants: Direct and Indirect.

What is a Direct Participant (DP)?

It is a bank located with Mainland China that has an account with CIPS and the Chinese National Payment System (CNAPS) aka HVPS. Think of HVPS as the Chinese equivalent of the US Fedwire. These are the only banks that may directly input payments into and receive payments the CIPS system.

The DPs include foreign owned banks in the PRC. These are called "FMIs" in the CIPS “literature”

What is an Indirect Participant (IDP)?

It is a bank located in Mainland China or overseas that has a correspondent account with one of more of the Direct Participants. Note that an IDP is not restricted to working with a single DP.

The IDP sends its payment orders to its Direct Participant correspondent for input into CIPS. The DP sends the payment order into CIPS, the DP's account with CIPS is debited for the payment.  The DP debits the IDP's account on its books. 

Any CIPS credits in favor of the IDP are credited to the DP's account with CIPS. The DP then credits the account of the IDP on its books. In this respect this is a mirror of CHIPS in New York City.

What are the benefits of CIPS?

  1. CNAPS/HVPS operates in the Chinese language only. CIPS allows a bank to send in an English language instruction which CIPS then “translates” into Chinese.
  2. It speeds up payments. CIPS participants send their payments direct to a DP in the PRC. They do not have to work through a bank in their time zone that first processes their payment, then relays it to one or more banks for payment in the PRC.
  3. CIPS is open 24 hours five days a week plus an additional four hours providing coverage in all time zones.
As of 31 December 2015, CIPS had 19 Direct Participant Banks and 185 Indirect Participant Banks with 50 countries in the world covered according to the Peoples Bank of China “2015 China Payment System Development Report” page 116.

As of 31 July 2020, CIPS has 33 Direct Participants (list here).and some 951 Indirect Participants in 97 countries, according to CIPS Participants’ Announcement #55

Among the Indirect Participants were 421 banks in Mainland China, 310 in the rest of Asia, 124 in Europe 37 in Africa, 26 in North America, 18 in Oceania, and 15 in South America, according to the same CIPS information.

Again an impressive change from its beginnings in October 2015.

If you’re interested in following this topic or checking AA’s math, data on CIPS performance is available in PBC quarterly and annual payment reports. You can access them here

Growth is very impressive. Trillions of US Dollars in payments per year sounds very impressive.

But let’s take a look at comparatives.

Based in New York, CHIPS bills itself as the “largest private sector USD clearing system in the world”. A claim supported by the average daily value of the transactions it processes.

CHIPS says that it processes some USD 1.5 trillion per day.

According to the BIS CPMI Payment Statistics for 2018, that would seem to be an understatement. Dividing the aggregate amount shown there (USD 418 trillion) by 252, the average is more like USD 1.7 trillion per working day.

Whatever the amount CHIPS processes the equivalent of CIPS yearly volumes in roughly 3 business days.

Per the same CPMI report (Table 8), CHIPS processed 115 million messages in 2018 or 82 times the messages processed by CIPS.

CIPS has made remarkable progress but still lags in US Dollar cross-border payments. And lags the HK RMB CHATS payment system.

That is not surprising.

It is relatively “early days” for the RMB as a global currency.

CIPS is a "youngster" compared to HK RMB CHATS –founded in 2007.

The US Dollar, Euro, and Sterling still dominate cross-border financial transactions with roughly a 75% to 77% share of all payment orders transmitted through SWIFT.

(SWIFT does not process payments but is a secure communication service for the transmission of financial information).

Per SWIFT the RMB generally has around a 2% share in global cross-border payment traffic.

You can see the statistics here in SWIFT’s RMB Tracker for July.

Sign up for the RMB Tracker here.

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