Futures
Accédez à des centaines de contrats perpétuels
TradFi
Or
Une plateforme pour les actifs mondiaux
Options
Hot
Tradez des options classiques de style européen
Compte unifié
Maximiser l'efficacité de votre capital
Trading démo
Introduction au trading futures
Préparez-vous à trader des contrats futurs
Événements futures
Participez aux événements et gagnez
Demo Trading
Utiliser des fonds virtuels pour faire l'expérience du trading sans risque
Lancer
CandyDrop
Collecte des candies pour obtenir des airdrops
Launchpool
Staking rapide, Gagnez de potentiels nouveaux jetons
HODLer Airdrop
Conservez des GT et recevez d'énormes airdrops gratuitement
Launchpad
Soyez les premiers à participer au prochain grand projet de jetons
Points Alpha
Tradez on-chain et gagnez des airdrops
Points Futures
Gagnez des points Futures et réclamez vos récompenses d’airdrop.
Investissement
Simple Earn
Gagner des intérêts avec des jetons inutilisés
Investissement automatique
Auto-invest régulier
Double investissement
Profitez de la volatilité du marché
Staking souple
Gagnez des récompenses grâce au staking flexible
Prêt Crypto
0 Fees
Mettre en gage un crypto pour en emprunter une autre
Centre de prêts
Centre de prêts intégré
US Treasury secretary believes CBDCs should be confidential
Assistant Secretary for Financial Institutions at the US Treasury Graham Steele spoke at a Texas conference about digitizing financial services. He focused on Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) and discussed their potential and consequences.
Steele, who oversees banking, credit unions, insurance, consumer protection, capital access, and cybersecurity policies, acknowledged the trend of digitizing financial services. He highlighted computing power and connectivity advancements as driving forces behind this shift. Steele emphasized the need to consider the financial industry’s new digital risks and opportunities.
He delved into significant developments such as CBDCs, the upcoming launch of FedNow, and the growth of Open Banking. Steele mentioned that the United States is actively studying the implications of CBDCs through an interagency working group led by the Treasury Department. The committee examines ious policy goals related to global financial leadership, national security, privacy, illicit financing, and financial inclusion.
You might also like:
Exploring the future of CBDCs: insights from Money20/20 Steele discussed the potential impacts of introducing a retail CBDC available to the public, including fostering a more competitive payment market and increasing access to financial services. However, he cautioned about the risks, such as instability in the private lending market and the need to balance user privacy, data traceability, and availability.
He also mentioned FedNow, a real-time payment settlement service by the Federal Reserve, enabling faster transactions and providing more options and resilience.
Steele highlighted the development of Open Banking and referenced Europe’s Revised Directive on Payment Services (PSD2) as an example. He emphasized the importance of safe data exchange to enhance access and competition in the United States.
However, he did sound a warning about the dangers that may arise, including the instability of the private sector lending market due to runs into a retail CBDC. To achieve this delicate balancing act, designers must consider user privacy, data traceability, and availability even when there is no network connection.
Read more:
Cato Institute survey reveals low US public awareness of CBDCs