[French] Settlement routing in JIL determines the path a transaction takes through compliance corridors before execution. Each settlement instruction passes through configurable policy gates that verify identity attestations, check sanctions lists, enforce velocity limits, and validate beneficiary details. Only after all corridor rules are satisfied does the settlement execute and produce a finality receipt.
[French] Traditional payment routing focuses on cost and speed optimization. Settlement routing for digital assets must additionally enforce compliance rules, verify identities, and produce audit evidence. Without compliance-aware routing, institutions risk regulatory violations, sanctions breaches, and inability to produce evidence during audits.
[French] JIL's settlement router evaluates each instruction against corridor-specific policies. Rules can require step-up verification for beneficiary changes, pause high-risk transactions for manual review, or automatically reject sanctioned entities. Every routing decision is logged in an immutable evidence pack that includes attestations, policy decisions, and timestamp proofs.
A compliance corridor is a configurable set of policy rules that a settlement must satisfy before execution. Corridors can enforce identity verification, sanctions screening, velocity limits, and beneficiary validation.
Yes. Institutions configure corridor policies to match their regulatory requirements. Rules can be set per jurisdiction, transaction type, amount threshold, or counterparty risk level.