Why do banks care more about blockchain than Cryptocurrencies?

The immense, wide-ranging potential of blockchain in banking
Blockchain solves more problems for the banking industry than Bitcoin. Here are five of the most anticipated applications of distributed ledger technology for banks:- Trade finance – the process by which banks provide credit to business customers in order to guarantee exchange of goods. This process is very antiquated, with much of it being paper-based; for example, bills of lading or letters of credit that are sent by fax or post around the world. Blockchain can “drive efficiencies, reduce cost base and open up new revenue opportunities, like newer models of credit and funding guarantees backing the trade”
- Payments – Cross border payments currently remain slow, expensive and possess a distinct lack of transparency. The noted FinTech firm R3 is currently working with a consortium of many of the world’s biggest banks to put in place an international payments system “that would allow existing central bank currencies and any new digital ones to be transacted via the blockchain”. IBM is also designing a new blockchain to enable banks to speed up cross-border payments, with the technology now expected to process up to 60% of all foreign currency transactions in the South Pacific's retail foreign exchange corridors, including Australia, New Zealand, Fiji, Samoa and Tonga by early-2018. Back in 2015, a renowned paper from Santander, in collaboration with Oliver Wyman and Anthemis Group, forecasted that distributed ledger technology could reduce banks’ infrastructure costs attributable to cross-border payments, securities trading and regulatory compliance by between $15-20 billion per annum by 2022.
- Clearing and Settlement - Accenture estimates that the world’s biggest investment banks could save $10bn by using blockchain technology to improve the efficiency of the clearing and settlement process. For instance, the Australian Securities Exchange has partnered with renowned blockchain start-up Digital Asset Holdings – and purchased a 5% equity stake in the company - to develop a new blockchain solution for the clearing and settlement of trades. The technology is expected to both simplify and speed-up post-trade processing.
- Regulation and Compliance - It is worth remembering the kind of climate banks have been operating in since the 2007-09 financial crisis – namely one of risk management and/or aversion, regulation. The combination of a backlash against perceived banking recklessness, low interest rates, strict regulations, government control and low consumer trust made banks shift focus away from prioritizing money-making, to ensuring customers and taxpayers are protected. Blockchain is now playing a major role in the RegTech revolution. As the Institute of International Finance acknowledged, “blockchain is transparent by design and could be a mechanism to give regulators direct, instant and full transparency of information in financial institutions. Since all transactions are documented on the distributed ledger, a comprehensive, secure, precise, irreversible, and permanent financial audit trail could exist for regulators. Reporting could be replaced by regulators’ participating in an appropriately permissioned transaction-related distributed ledger”.
- Syndicated loans – it takes an average of 19 days for banks to settle money raised via a syndicated loan in the US. Much of the communication is also fax/paper-based. Seven banks, including BNP Paribas, HSBC, ING, BNY Mellon and State Street, are now jointly developing a block-chain powered marketplace for syndicated loans.
The problems banks have with Bitcoin
Despite being less than ten years old, Bitcoin’s short history is already littered with major controversies:- Gox– bankruptcy of the world’s biggest Bitcoin exchange after $460 million was reportedly stolen by hackers.
- The feature of anonymity when trading Bitcoin has meant that cross border transaction business inevitably attracted illegal activity, including drug dealing, money laundering and even terrorism financing. Such activity led to the shutdown of infamous online black-market venue Silk Road in 2014. Banks are doing their best to improve their AML credentials at the moment – exposure to Bitcoin would not help this cause.
- While the blockchain itself is immutable, the exchanges that are hosting crypto trading are not decentralized. This has led to numerous incidents of exchanges being hacked and millions of dollars of Bitcoin and other digital currencies being stolen; for example, Bithumb. Clearly such poor security on exchanges would be a no-go for banks.
- Volatility - Bitcoin topped $10,000 earlier this year, meaning that it has surged by a barely believable 850% last year. That’s four times more than dot-com stocks were returning during their most frenzied period in the late 1990s. Is Bitcoin a bubble? Will it eventually crash? Difficult to say, but with the lack of any clear certainty surrounding this issue, banks are clearly erring on the side of caution during this post-crisis period.
Whilst having spent a lot of his life in Asia, John DeCleene has lived and studied all over the world - including spells in Hong Kong, Mexico, The U.S. and China. He graduated with a BA in Political Science from Tulane University in 2016. Fluent in English and proficient in Mandarin and Spanish, he can communicate and connect with most of the world’s population too, and this certainly helped John as he gained work experience interning for the U.S.-Taiwan Business counsel in Washington D.C. as an investment analyst and then working alongside U.S. Senator Robert P. Casey of Pennsylvania as a legislative intern. He subsequently worked as a business analyst for a mutual fund in Singapore, where his passion for travel and aptitude for creating connections between opportunities and ideas was the perfect intersection of natural ability and experience, spending his time travelling between Cambodia, Hong Kong, and China investigating and discovering untapped investment opportunities. John is a fund manager for OCIM’s fintech fund, and currently progressing towards becoming a CFA charter holder. He loves to travel for business and pleasure, having visited 38 countries (including North Korea); he represents the new breed of global citizen for the 21st century.