Japan's Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Ends Blockchain Payment Network Plan
Slow growth in transaction numbers caused by COVID-19 made it difficult to expand the business at the pace originally planned.
Updated May 11, 2023 at 5:57 p.m. UTC
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFG), one of Japan's largest financial institutions, said it will suspend its high-speed blockchain payment network venture, GO-NET Japan, and close down the business.
- Slow growth in the number of transactions resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic made it difficult to expand the business at the pace originally planned, MUFG said Wednesday.
- Furthermore, the network struggled to find a fit in the internet-of-things (IoT) market, which it planned to incorporate.
- "As a result, the business is not expected to be able to achieve profitability in a reasonable time frame," MUFG said. "GO-NET Japan will suspend operations and liquidation procedures of GO-NET and GO-NET Japan will proceed thereafter."
- The Global Open Network (GO-NET) venture with Cambridge, Mass.-based tech firm Akamai was announced in November 2020 with the aim of providing cheaper, more efficient payment services. GO-NET said the platform could handle 100,000 transactions per second and could be expanded to reach as high as 10 million per second for small payments.
- This news doesn't signal the end MUFG's activity in the blockchain and digital currency industries. Its trust banking arm earlier this month announced plans to issue a stablecoin pegged to the yen as a means of payment to enable instant settlement of security transactions.