Facebook says it wants ‘fair shot’ in crypto payments sphere

Payments push centres on digital wallet used to move money around the world

Some $100 billion (€85 billion) in payments have been enabled by Facebook over the past year. Photograph: AFP via Getty

Facebook's mission is to "bring the world closer together." Increasingly, that is not just about connecting friends and family to share messages but also serving as a platform for people's financial lives. Some $100 billion (€85 billion) in payments have been enabled by Facebook over the past year, said David Marcus, who runs the company's financial services unit. But that is just the start of the social network's ambitions in the finance industry, Mr Marcus writes in a new memo about the country's "broken" payments system.

At the centre of Facebook’s push into payments is Novi, a digital wallet intended for users to move money around the world quickly and cheaply (free, in many cases). The company had plans to pair it with a “stablecoin” cryptocurrency called Libra, but that was shelved amid regulatory scrutiny, and now the scaled-back project, known as Diem, is overseen by an outside non-profit group seeking the necessary government approvals.

In recounting some of Facebook’s setbacks in trying to break into the crypto payments industry, Mr Marcus describes the tech giant, the subject of antitrust inquiries around the world, as an underdog. Facebook faces unfair resistance in the financial industry, he wrote.

“I’ve heard multiple conversations about how this proposal would be so great if only Facebook wasn’t involved,” he said. “I understand and accept the need for extra scrutiny due to our scale.”

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‘Challenger’

But Mr Marcus describes Facebook as a “challenger in the payments industry,” with no specific plan yet to monetise use of the Novi wallet, which will not charge for person-to-person payments, even across borders.

He added that allowing users to pay with dollars, euros and other fiat currencies via the Novi wallet would bring a lot of value.

“So why not just do that and call it a day?” he wrote. “Well, we might.” But before deciding on that, he does not want to “waste our shot” at incorporating stablecoins into an “open, interoperable protocol” for online payments. “To have the maximum impact, building a closed system using fiat only wasn’t going to cut it,” he said in the memo.

Crypto advocates say blockchain technology allows for products that eliminate middlemen, credit checks and fees and it allows people excluded from traditional financial services to transact anytime, anywhere. Mr Marcus said that a well-designed stablecoin pegged to a fiat currency, backed one-to-one in cash reserves, could offer strong consumer protections. It would also be quicker to access funds than traditional bank accounts.

In practice, regulators are wary of stablecoins. An investigation of the popular stablecoin Tether by the New York attorney general's office found that the company minted tokens without reserves to back them. In recent weeks, crypto tokens have raised concerns from US treasury secretary Janet Yellen, Securities and Exchange Commission chair Gary Gensler and US senator Elizabeth Warren.

Allay concerns

Mr Marcus is seeking to allay those concerns. “We will continue to persevere and demonstrate we can be a trusted player in this industry,” he wrote, adding that the Novi wallet has licences or approvals in nearly every US state and the Diem stablecoin project “has addressed every legitimate concern.”

Facebook’s digital wallet is ready to come to market, Mr Marcus said, and “we deserve a fair shot.” Judging by Facebook’s difficulties getting to this point, regulators remain to be convinced. – New York Times Service