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German development bank KfW has announced the issuance of a €4 billion ($4.28 billion) digital bond barely two years after its first offering in 2022.

The state-owned bank will lean on the Deutsche Borse D7 post-trade platform, Clearstream, for the second time. The digital bond has a maturity rate of three years propped by interest rates pegged at 2.75%.

Digital bonds lean on blockchain technology for their issuance, recording, and settlements, offering a broad range of benefits, including democratizing the capital markets and providing higher transparency levels.

On a surface level, KfW’s bond ranks as the largest single issuance of a digital bond, dwarfing Hong Kong’s $756 million offering at the start of the year. There are several critics poking holes over its status as a digital bond for relying on a centralized bond, although supporters point to the underlying smart contracts on the platform.

Despite the criticisms surrounding the offering, KfW Treasurer Tim Armbruster disclosed that the new digital bond significantly improves the speed of issuance by automating the data generation process.

“We are delighted to have successfully completed a second digital transaction, with a focus on further automating data generation and speeding up the issuance process, thus improving scalability,” said Armbruster.

The first iteration of the offering was a mere $20 million issuance scheduled to mature over two years but leaned on a central security depository (CSD). Prior to the launch of the second digital bond, KfW hinted at a digital currency-based securities issuance of a digital bond but the plans failed to gather significant steam.

Deutsche Borse D7 has found wide applicability in the ecosystem since its launch. It has processed north of 30,000 digital issuances and played a key role in the European Union’s (EU) experiments with blockchain for capital markets.

“We thank Deutsche Börse for the constructive cooperation over the past months. It is important to us to provide key insights from the issuer’s perspective to contribute to the further digitisation of capital markets,” Armbruste added.

Digital bonds garner major interests

Digital bonds have attracted significant institutional interest in recent weeks following the stellar results from early pilot studies involving the offering. Since 2023, several firms, including Daiwa Securities and Santander, have rolled out their offerings on private and public blockchains, setting the foundation for broader interests.

For all their positives, regulatory uncertainties continue to plague digital bonds, exacerbated by an absence of common regulatory standards for the asset class. Apart from regulations, digital bonds must grapple with dire security vulnerabilities and challenges related to introducing emerging technologies into traditional financial markets.

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