Bu makaleyi paylaş

Australian Securities Exchange Building New Blockchain Platform With VMWare, Digital Asset

ASX is teaming up with Digital Asset and VMWare to move its current exchange platform onto distributed ledger technology.

Güncellendi 13 Eyl 2021 öö 11:22 Yayınlandı 26 Ağu 2019 ös 5:30 1 min readAI tarafından çevrildi
Australian flags

The Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) is teaming up with fintech firm Digital Asset and VMWare to move its current exchange platform onto distributed ledger technology.

Announced today, ASX and Digital Asset have signed a three-party memorandum of understanding (MOU) to build a replacement platform for the existing Clearing House Electronic Subregister System (CHESS) onto DLT. MOUs are usually non-binding documents that point to a company's intention

Begun in 2015, ASX plans on the new DLT-platform to be up and running by Spring 2021. As of now, 30 to 40 percent of the new platform is available to replace CHESS.

Speaking with ZDNet, ASX deputy CEO Peter Hiom said ASX said the MOU will help it expand both product offerings and service locations across Australia and New Zealand:

“This new partnership is a very positive development that will help us support a wider range of DLT solutions developed by the industry. It confirms our belief in the potential of DLT as we remain on track to deliver the CHESS replacement system in March-April 2021.”

ASX is also using Digital Asset’s open-source, blockchain-focused language DAML for the project.

ASX’s current platform handles some AU $2 trillion in registered equities along with AU $5 billion processed per day.

Australian flag image via Shutterstock

あなたへの

ETFs (Markus Winkler/Pixabay, modified by CoinDesk)

IBIT recorded its second-biggest single-day net outflow since launch on Wednesday, missing a January record by less than half a million dollars, as the Iran-driven sell-off pulled institutional money out of bitcoin.

知っておくべきこと:

  • BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust saw $527.84 million in net outflows on Wednesday, its second-largest single-day withdrawal since launching in January and just shy of its record.
  • The 11 U.S. spot bitcoin ETFs together lost $733.43 million that day, extending a multi-session streak of outflows that has pulled more than $2...