--- Utopia Verbal Critical Reasoning Test -expert- Santander -
A) Santander’s risk appetite is incompatible with any form of blockchain technology. B) The primary obstacle to Project Veritas is not technical feasibility but regulatory architecture. C) Neobanks will capture the entire 18% market share regardless of Santander’s decision. D) Reducing settlement time is irrelevant to Santander’s core customer base. E) A 14-month delay would eliminate the competitive advantage of faster settlements.
A board member argues: “We should deploy the current pilot without the permissioned view and negotiate ex-post fines. The projected fines are less than 32% of CAPEX.”
Santander’s stated principle: “In any conflict between innovation and regulatory compliance, compliance must govern the pace and scope of deployment.” --- Utopia Verbal Critical Reasoning Test -expert- Santander
A) Neobanks will inevitably face regulatory sanctions for their lack of traceability. B) The 18% projected market share loss is calculated using the same risk-adjusted metrics as Santander’s internal models. C) Regulators will not grant a temporary waiver for blockchain-based remittances. D) The 14-month delay and 32% CAPEX increase are acceptable trade-offs for preserving regulatory alignment. E) Latin American UIFs currently have the technical capacity to access a permissioned blockchain view.
Below is an excerpt from the Internal Strategy Memo. A) Santander’s risk appetite is incompatible with any
Which of the following, if true, most seriously weakens this argument?
Which of the following conclusions is most strongly supported by the memo? D) Reducing settlement time is irrelevant to Santander’s
"While blockchain reduces settlement time from 48 hours to 90 seconds, our compliance framework demands absolute traceability for anti-money laundering (AML). The pilot’s pseudonymity layer conflicts with GDPR and local financial intelligence units (UIFs). Santander’s risk appetite explicitly prioritizes regulatory alignment over speed-to-market. However, competitors without legacy compliance structures (neobanks) have already deployed similar technologies. A full rollout would require building a proprietary 'permissioned view' for regulators—estimated to delay launch by 14 months and increase project CAPEX by 32%. Without rollout, we retain compliance but forfeit a projected 18% market share in remittances to non-traditional players by Q3." Question 1 (Identifying Assumptions) The argument that Santander should delay the rollout implicitly assumes that:
A) Launching the pilot in a jurisdiction with no explicit blockchain AML rules, then lobbying for retroactive approval. B) Shelving the project entirely and reallocating the CAPEX to traditional SWIFT infrastructure upgrades. C) Proceeding with the 14-month delay to build the permissioned view, even if competitors gain initial market share. D) Creating a separate legal subsidiary with a lower risk appetite to deploy the unmodified blockchain. E) Deploying now but adding a manual audit trail within 90 days, acknowledging the interim regulatory gap. Q1 – Correct Answer: D Rationale: The argument’s conclusion is that Santander should not roll out without the permissioned view. This depends on assuming that the trade-off (delay + cost) is acceptable relative to the risk of non-compliance. D makes this implicit value judgment explicit. A, B, C, and E are either unstated or irrelevant to the core conditional reasoning.
