UAE, Saudi working on digital currency for cross-border deals

Reuters  |  ABU DHABI 

By Stanley Carvalho

(Reuters) - The United Arab is working with Arabia's central to issue a that would be accepted in cross-border transactions between the two countries, central governor Mubarak Rashed al-Mansouri said on Wednesday.

The would be based on blockchain, the shared ledger of transactions that is maintained by a network of computers on the internet rather than a central authority, he said in a speech to a regional financial conference.

The two central banks have in the past expressed scepticism about currencies such as bitcoin, with the central saying it did not recognise bitcoin as an official In July, the central warned against trading bitcoin because it was outside the bank's regulatory reach.

On Wednesday, however, Mansouri said the central banks wanted to understand blockchain technology better. He told reporters that the UAE-would be used among banks, not by individual consumers, and would make transactions more efficient.

"It is digitisation of what we do already between central banks and banks," he said.

A decade ago, the and Arabia discussed the possibility of creating a single among members of the six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council but the pulled out of the project in 2009.

However, diplomatic and economic ties between the and Arabia have been strengthening this year, and last week the said it planned to establish a bilateral committee with Arabia on economic, political and military issues.

(Writing by Andrew Torchia; Editing by Matthew Mpoke Bigg/Jeremy Gaunt)

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First Published: Wed, December 13 2017. 16:54 IST