Blockchain Front Page: New York regulators approved new Crypto ventures

robinhood-bitlicense

Last week our theme was “Anonymous transactions in Bitcoin”

Our theme for this week is “New York regulators approved new Crypto ventures

Its official, New Yorkers can now use Robinhood to buy Bitcoin. The Department of Financial Services in New York has officially approved a BitLicense for the popular trading app. Residents in the State of New York will be able to buy Bitcoin using Robinhood’s app, with their debit cards.

In a blog post, Robinhood announced they were also granted a money transmission license by the state. Since January last year, Robinhood has expanded the number of cryptocurrencies listed and currently has seven of them available in 30 states across the US.

LibertyX was the second company to be recently granted a BitLicense, becoming the very first regulated company to let New Yorkers buy Bitcoin, using traditional ATMs. Their BitLicense will allow New Yorkers to purchase BTC, at potentially thousands of brick and mortar locations through the state. LibertyX introduced the first Bitcoin machine in 2014. The company makes it easy for anyone to buy virtual currencies in more than 19,000 physical location in the U.S.

When it come to cryptocurrencies, the State of New York has some of the toughest regulations. A BitLicense is required to offer cryptocurrency services in New York. The license was created in 2015 and is considered one of the most important and hardest licenses to get in the US, because of strict regulations relating to anti-money-laundering, anti-fraud and cybersecurity policies. Up to now, the New York regulator has approved 16 companies to offer cryptocurrency services in New York.

Many investors see regulation as the primary reason for crypto’s bear market and the ICO slowdown in 2018. Most crypto enthusiasts are not optimistic about regulations for crypto. For many, the idea of assets like Bitcoin is to get around the regulations of the traditional financial system. An article on Medium, goes as far as saying “The BitLicense Is a Bad Idea That Must Die“.

“All the “BitLicenses” in the world could not stop MTGOX from having a software problem, and no law can bring back the money lost either directly or through the disruption the event caused by the software error. Once again, entrepreneurs powered by the internet make life easier and better, not laws and regulations. Regulation does not make software correct; developers do.”

Recently, the Winklevoss twins publicly ran an advertising campaign encouraging rules for crypto. The ad goes: “Crypto Needs Rules.”

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I think that regulation is very important for validating crypto. When big organizations like Yale, Goldman and Fidelity make investments in cryptocurrencies, this brings a lot of credibility to the market. But, regulation can validate the market beyond anything else. It brings clarity and protection to both businesses and consumers.

The fact that government regulators are taking note, is very important. Yet, none of this is to say that government regulations are always good. Regulations need to be taken with a grain of salt, because over-regulation can hurt businesses in an early stage of growth and stifle innovation. As we go through this transitional period, its very likely that those who can’t afford to play by the rules, will disappear.

I expect 2019, will be the year of regulation. At the last G20 meeting, the top 20 economies said it clearly: “We will regulate cryptocurrencies.”

We will see more and more government agencies across the globe, defining regulatory frameworks for crypto, to provide adequate consumer protection. More regulatory clarity can speed up the process of major financial institutions getting in the market and open up the possibility of public investment vehicles, like an exchange-traded fund (ETF), Regulation is blessing for crypto entrepreneurs and companies, because it will provide clarity and fuel further market growth.

For more about the Front Page Weekly CXO Briefing, please click here.

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Ilias Louis Hatzis is the Founder & CEO at Mercato Blockchain Corporation AG. He writes the Blockchain Weekly Front Page each Monday.

Are Stock exchanges fast and efficient?

financial-markets

The Austrian school of economics view is that

Stock Exchanges are the fastest and most efficient data-processing large scale system that we humans have designed so far.

Stock exchanges need roughly 15minutes of trade to determine the effect of a piece of news – political, scientific, ecological, societal etc – on the prices of shares.

Whether this will change with DLT technology and when is up in the air. For now, we have old and powerful institutions running these data-processing systems and it won’t be easy to take steal their Cheese.

The Frankfurt Stock Exchange is over 400 yrs old with a market cap putting it in the 10th position globally[1]. The London Stock Exchange (LSE) and the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) are both over 200yrs old and are in the 3rd and 1st respectively by market cap. Just a few blocks away from the front runner, there is NASDAQ only 45yrs old and with a 2nd ranking in market cap.

The 29yr old Australian Securities Xchange (ASX) ranking 14th in size, is actually the bravest in that they were the first to explore DLT technology for their settlement and post-trade activities. Digital Asset has been their partner, with whom they have been designing a replacement of their Clearing system CHESS since 2015, which they actually own (not the case for other stock exchanges). The full launch has been pushed out again from 2020 to 2021.

The architecture of this system maintains the messaging-based interaction with its participants and does not require them to have to run a node on the network in order to participate.

“We are often told by many, including other market infrastructures, ‘You’re so brave that you’re going first, you’re using DLT’ — we actually genuinely consider it brave to embark upon a large transformation program and not adopt this technology,” said Cliff Richards[2] ASX`s executive general manager of Equity Post-Trade Services.

NASDAQ is the most active stock exchange by being involved in several different DLT initiatives that are, however, recent.  In Spring 2016, in a post about Fintech in action on Western stock exchanges, I had mentioned Linq, a private blockchain company focused on private securities issuance. Linq allowed unlisted private companies to represent their share ownership digitally and securely. Later, Linq and Chain[3], a blockchain services provider, used DLT to register digitally ownership of private shares.

In May 2017, Nasdaq partnered with CitiConnect for Blockchain and took Linq to the next level. They went through a seamless end-to-end transactional process for private company securities.  Payment and reconciliation magic via DLT.

In October 2018, NASDAQ also partnered with the Azure blockchain service of Microsoft[4]. The aim is to integrate it in order to improve buyer-seller matching, management of delivery and payment. The key advantage they present is that this deployment will allow for interoperability with customers using various blockchains.

What really caught my attention is the Nasdaq`s use of DLT technology in their newswire services. They are starting to use smart contracts for time-sensitive data like corporate announcements, press releases, regulatory filings, etc and the associated valuable meta-data. Nasdaq seems to have filed for a patent around this  – Nasdaq Gets Patent for Blockchain Newswire to Solve Gaps in Audit Trail Gaps and Errors[5]!

For me, this latest use case can be big. Distributing meta-data through smart contracts and giving access to it on a pay-as-you-go basis, will be a huge business in financial markets and Nasdaq can dominate in this. If this then gets integrated into their market analytics business, then bingo.

[1] Data source from the Visual Capitalist as of April 2017 – Comparing the largest Stock exchanges

[2]Here’s what to expect from ASX’s blockchain-based CHESS replacement

[3] Chain was acquired by Stellar in Sep 2018

[4] Microsoft to Integrate Blockchain Offering Into Nasdaq Services Following New Partnership

[5] Nasdaq Wins Patent for Blockchain-Based Newswire Service

Efi Pylarinou is the founder of Efi Pylarinou Advisory and a Fintech/Blockchain influencer. 

Get fresh daily insights from an amazing team of Fintech thought leaders around the world. Ride the Fintech wave by reading us daily in your email.

 

 

DX Exchange Security token model could democratise Wall street

2019 is the year of the Security tokens. We have had several ebbs and flows in the Blockchain industry over the last few years. Events of the past 18 months especially have shaken the industry into some serious introspection.

Revelations around the lack of controls and regulations around capital raising models have brought the industry into serious disrepute – in such a fashion that the merits of the Blockchain framework have been challenged. Being a passionate student and a commentator of the industry, I still believe, the model is intact, its the controls around it that have failed to stop human greed from causing havoc.

On the brighter side though, security tokens were seen as the bail out for the industry in many ways. Towards the end of 2018, there were a lot of talks that the model has merits, and as soon as the year opened, we have had the news of DX Exchange platform launch.

The DX Exchange platform allows bluechip stocks traded in NASDAQ on Blockchain using security tokens – this would cut out the middlemen, and when rolled out across markets, would save Billions. The disintermediation that the model brings to the table, will also put several business models dependent on Wall street at risk.

Why is this a better model than an ICO? Is this just another hype? Is this a perfect model that will create the new inclusive Capital markets?

I believe, ICO was the wrong start to the right journey. Being an early stage Venture Capital investor, I understand that valuing a startup is more of an art than science. There are very few data points. So when a business that has no way to value itself goes on Blockchain, the intrinsic value behind the tokens will be challenged by the traditional financial services industry.

Blockchain purists will argue that the new capital markets driven by Blockchain wouldn’t need traditional financial services principles AS-IS. However, what we are trying to do with Blockchain is a massive change in the way we exchange value, and that can only happen by collaborating with the incumbents.

If value has to move from traditional markets to the Neo Market, it can’t happen without key stakeholders in the traditional markets understanding the value of the Neo Market and embracing it. Security tokens can make that happen.

DX stressed that its digital stocks are classed as derivatives — with the underlying asset being equity of 10 Nasdaq-listed firms — and that its platform is regulated under the European Union’s Mifid II directive

CNBC News

With Security tokens, the problem of intrinsic value is resolved. When you have a token that’s valued based on an underlying stock – most people who understand derivatives will get it. Of course, the tokenisation process, the exchange, its participants, operational details of managing transactions will have to be regulated and audited regularly to ensure that the security token industry gains credibility.

In doing so, we would have created a disintermediated Neo market on the Blockchain, but still largely within a traditional financial ecosystem. That is the first step, and I believe the right step for Blockchain in Finance.

Will there be scams? There will be – for sure. But I believe the worst of these scams are behind us, and with controlled progress, the Blockchain industry should see the adoption that it was meant to.

I am really hopeful that there will be a day when Mangoes from my farm in India and Buckingham palace will both go on Blockchain, and I will be able to trade some equity in the palace with Mangoes.


Arunkumar Krishnakumar is a Venture Capital investor at Green Shores Capital focusing on Inclusion and a podcast host.

Get fresh daily insights from an amazing team of Fintech thought leaders around the world. Ride the Fintech wave by reading us daily in your email


Blockchain Front Page this week: Bitcoin Whales, Bulls & Bears Heading to zero? Or heading to $1 million? Your call

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Last week our theme was “Governments Love Blockchain

Our theme for this week is “Bitcoin Whales, Bulls & Bears Heading to zero? Or heading to $1 million? Your call

Over the last year, we have seen all kinds of predictions regarding Bitcoin and its future. Some claim that its doomed, heading to zero, while others believe that it will eventually reach breakaway speed and jump out of the stratosphere.

To the inexperienced users who’ve heard of Bitcoin, but don’t really know about it, price drops over the last year are only an indication of Bitcoin’s failure. However, for those that have been in the market for a while, they are aware that Bitcoin has had its fair share of bear markets in the past and has come back stronger.

Cryptocurrencies have followed an interesting path, since their boom in late 2017. There has been growth, regulation, and changing sentiment.

Despite the dropping prices, the crypto user base has been growing. According to a report by the Cambridge Center for Alternative Finance, crypto users doubled in 2018 rising from 85 million in 2017 to more than 139 million in the first three quarters of 2018.

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Governments are developing regulatory frameworks to foster cryptocurrency innovation, and large financial institutions are getting involved.

In July 2018, Malta became the first country in the world to establish a clear regulatory framework for cryptocurrencies and ICOs. Japan again has been ahead of the curve, by officially allowing the crypto industry to self regulate. It has turned over this responsibility to the Virtual Currency Exchange Association (JVCEA), rather than authorizing traditional financial regulators, to oversee crypto exchanges.

Despite attempts at regulation, it still remains a challenge. The U.S. approach to regulating the crypto industry has been to work within its current laws, rather than introduce new ones. Other countries like Russia and India are preparing specific legislation for cryptocurrencies. We can expect governments to focus on taxation and regulation for ICOs/tokens offered  to the public, as the top nations agreed in the last G20 Summit.

The crypto market tends to be very emotional and volatile. People tend to get greedy, when the market rises, developing FOMO or become erratic, selling their coins when they see red numbers. The Crypto Fear & Greed Index, shows us how people’s emotions and sentiments change over time.Screen Shot 2019-01-14 at 12.37.40 AM.png

When it comes to ICOs last year, we saw even more growth, significantly higher than 2017. In 2018, ICOs raised  $21 billion in capital , 3.5 times more than 2017.

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Yet, investors no longer needed to buy BTC or ETH to buy the tokens of blockchain projects. 2018, was the age of private sales. With private sales, investors can purchase tokens directly, using US dollars or other fiat currencies. The 2017 bull run, in many wats was driven by investors buying ICO tokens with BTC and ETH.

On the tech side, despite the bearish market trends, Lightning Network has been making significant strides. We’ve seen a sudden influx of nodes on LN, growing by 300%. Data analyzed by 1ML.com showed that its 11,000 nodes surpassed $2 million and 574 BTC. LN can potentially, push the Bitcoin to a larger audience, which may include large centralized banks. Once Bitcoin gets past the scalability issue, its adaptation in the main financial ecosystem will boom to new heights.

One of the most anticipated developments coming soon to the crypto industry is the launch of Bakkt. Intercontinental Exchange, the operator of the New York Stock Exchange is planning to launch Bakkt, a federally regulated market which will seamlessly and safely enable institutions and consumers to buy, store and sell crypto assets.

It remains to be seen if we will see a significant increase in value, if prices remain around these levels or drop even more. As Bitcoin, cryptocurrency and blockchain adoption continues to grow, it simply becomes harder for them to disappear in thin air or for prices to go to zero. The fact is that cryptocurrencies aren’t going away and will remain an important element of the landscape in the future. Peer-to-peer, decentralized cryptocurrencies hold tremendous potential. The crypto market and blockchain technology are still in their infancy and more innovations are yet to come.

The crash we saw in 2018, is by no means an indication of long term value. At this point, the market will continue to be affected by speculation. Even small developments by governments and regulators will likely affect prices. Also, a big numbers of Bitcoins have been moved by whales out of cold storage. On any given day, this could mean market changes, larger than 10%, in either direction,.

It’s difficult to put a finger on price, but I believe that prices will rise over time and Bitcoin will regain its footing. As institutional investors join the market, they will jumpstart the next bull run. Whether it happens through direct investment or because of new developments like Bakkt or Bitcoin ETFs, one thing is for sure, its coming.

For more about the Front Page Weekly CXO Briefing, please click here.

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Ilias Louis Hatzis is the Founder & CEO at Mercato Blockchain Corporation AG. He writes the Blockchain Weekly Front Page each Monday.

Blockchain Weekly Front Page: Bitcoin: A Year in Review… 2019 will be decisive for Bitcoin and Cryptocurrencies

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Last week our theme was “Coinbase IPO… waiting for the bull”

Our theme for this week is “Bitcoin: A Year in Review… 2019 will be decisive for Bitcoin and Cryptocurrencies

To say that we’re in the midst of change and uncertainty is an understatement. 2018 has been a tough year for cryptocurrencies. This year left a blood trail for cryptocurrency investors. Bitcoin’s value dropped from $19,352 on December 17th, 2017, to $3,862.80 on December 31st, 2018. Ethereum fell from $1,405 on January 10th to $139.83 on December 31st. Other cryptos, like Bitcoin Cash and Ripple, also had big drops in value.

As this year comes to a close, the world of Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies looks fragile, volatile, and chaotic.

We tend to look at numbers as a way of quantifying progress and measuring growth. But looking only at the price of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies is a negative and depressing way to measure market growth. It certainly does not give us the entire picture. Progress goes beyond plain numbers and IMHO the reality is completely different.

While the cryptocurrency market has lost 85% of its value in 2018, the number of new users has been growing. Cryptocurrency adoption nearly doubled in 2018, despite the bear market. At the end of 2017, there were 18 million users in the cryptocurrency ecosystem, now there are 35 million users, a 94% increase this year alone.

A new study published by the Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance paints a completely different picture:

  • The total number of users exceeds 139 million, with at least 35 million that have verified their identities.
  • Service providers are pro-actively adopting measures to comply with regulation, even though they are not explicitly subject to regulations. With 37% maintaining an in-house compliance team and more than half performing KYC/AML checks, these self-regulatory efforts show growing market maturity.
  • The cryptocurrency ecosystem is becoming more connected to traditional finance. Fiat-to-crypto trades are allowed on some exchanges, bank wires dominate both deposits and withdrawals, while many exchanges support a greater number of deposit options than withdrawal options, with 69% maintaining relationships with established traditional payment networks.

While big players are not here yet, they are coming. There are still some missing pieces that are holding them back, especially when it comes to an institutional-grade custodial solution for Bitcoin. But, CME Bitcoin futures average daily volume has been rising all year, almost tripling between the first and third quarter this year. Fidelity’s move into the crypto space with its institutionally focused crypto custody solution is reigniting hope for many.

In January we should see the launch of Bakkt, a cryptocurrency market, backed by the Intercontinental Exchange, Microsoft, and Starbucks. While the launch has been delayed until Jan 24th, 2019, it is widely anticipated and will be a catalyst for major cash inflows to crypto. This December, Facebook finally announced that rumors were true and it was moving into the crypto space with a new stablecoin project.

These are just a few of positive developments, still a lot can go wrong.

All year long, there have been numerous crackdowns throughout the world specifically on ICOs. 2018 marked the beginning of big troubles for Initial Coin Offerings, with regulators like the U.S. Securities Exchange Commission cracking down on ICOs. The SEC nailed a couple crypto projects in the last quarter of this year. It seems that every ICO is at potential risk, and it is likely that most ICOs have performed unregistered securities offerings. But for some with good reason, like Cloud With Me, Tezos, Latium Network and Bitconnect, which was an outright scam. While the term “Ponzi scheme” gets thrown around a lot on the crypto industry, for the most part it is completely unfounded.

Yet, we could see big changes when it comes to ICOs in 2019. As the SEC considers most cryptocurrencies securities, many believe that security tokens will be the next big gold rush. And they have good reason to think so, as tokenized stocks will be backed up by a tangible asset, such as the company’s shares or profits.

Will Bitcoin rise in 2019?

I believe that blockchain and cryptocurrencies are the future. I believe the price of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies will go up this year. But this is only a guess. Investors are still recouping from the losses of 2018’s bear cycle. While Bitcoin has certainly become a mainstream financial instrument, revolutionizing how we think about money, it continues to surprise us with its unstable behavior.

With prices low, the threshold to enter the market is favorable. In a declining market, you can invest in promising alt-coins which should soon release their completed products, and ensure market growth for the future.

Bitcoin has experienced quite the journey since Satoshi Nakamoto published its white paper in 2008 and a lot of things are changing on a global level. A number of jurisdictions have provided more regulatory clarity and I expect this to continue in 2019. This will give even more comfort to retail and institutional investors and help the market grow in 2019, despite the price tumble we saw in 2018. Without a doubt, the coming year is going to be a decisive one for Bitcoin & cryptocurrencies and their long-term future.

For more about the Front Page Weekly CXO Briefing, please click here.

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Ilias Louis Hatzis is the Founder & CEO at Mercato Blockchain Corporation AG. He writes the Blockchain Weekly Front Page each Monday.

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Ilias Louis Hatzis is the Founder & CEO at Mercato Blockchain Corporation AG. He writes the Blockchain Weekly Front Page each Monday.

BBVA and Porsche – Is DIY Corporate lending on Blockchain the future?

Earlier this month, BBVA announced an acquisition term loan offering on Blockchain, where they lent $170 Million to Porsche.

An acquisition loan is a loan given to a company to purchase a specific asset or to be used for purposes that are laid out before the loan is granted.

– Investopedia

The credit line will allow Porsche to expand their retail distribution channels in Europe and Asia. This is yet another feather in the cap for the BBVA, as they set to establish themselves as a front runner in providing innovative financial services.

In executing this credit line facility, BBVA have managed two firsts – first acquisition term loan ever arranged through blockchain technology, and Porsche Holding is also the first non-Spanish borrower using this technology for the negotiation and closing of a corporate loan

For the BBVA, this is by no means their first stab at something adventurous with Blockchain. Earlier to this, they have offered a syndicate loan on Blockchain for $170 Million to Red Electrica. They also offered a line of credit with Repsol for $367 Million. But this is the first time they have extended it to a non-Spanish borrower.

The press release from the BBVA discusses the benefits of using Blockchain in their Corporate lending process. From automating negotiations and minimizing operational risks, to bringing transparency and immutability to the documentation, the technology adds efficiency to the lending process.

“Our aim is to improve clients’ experience by simplifying processes and enhancing the speed of execution”


Frank Hoefnagels, Head of BBVA CIB in Germany

But BBVA have high ambitions and believe that the technology can help convert corporate lending into a “Do it Yourself” process for their corporate and business clients.

This might yet be another PR stunt, however, if they manage to achieve it, the benefits that framework would add is immense. That can be a blueprint for banks and alternative finance firms to use as a lending operating model for SMEs.

There are firms who have managed to gather a lot of intelligence around lending to SMEs. One of my portfolio firms Funding Xchange is a champion at that. That intelligence acheived through facilitating business loans over the years combined with the process efficiencies and seamlessness that Blockchain could potentially offer would create impact at scale.

It is a year when many crypto dreams have crumbled. But dream we shall, for its the season of hope. And as the New Year dawns, there can be only one way forward – Onwards and Upwards. Happy New Year folks!!


Arunkumar Krishnakumar is a Venture Capital investor at Green Shores Capital focusing on Inclusion and a podcast host.

Get fresh daily insights from an amazing team of Fintech thought leaders around the world. Ride the Fintech wave by reading us daily in your email


Blockchain Weekly Front Page: Coinbase IPO… waiting for the bull.

coinbase

Last week our theme was “Basis shuts down. Will regulation kill crypto?”

Our theme for this week is “Basis shuts down. Will regulation kill crypto?

In a recent interview on CNBC, when Asiff Hirji, President and COO of Coinbase, was asked about Bitcoin’s price surge during the holiday season, he said that “it’s not surprising that Bitcoin has bounced back.” He also said, that “the company is a long way from an IPO and is currently focused only on building a great business.”

While we’ve all heard the rumors of Coinbase’s upcoming IPO, its evident that the company won’t IPO until it sees, from it’s proprietary data, that bear market is over.

In 2017, Coinbase crossed $1 billion mark, when Bitcoin hit $20,000. In October 2018, it was valued around $8 billion. What’s even more impressive is that the company expects  to meet its target $1.3 billion in revenue.

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Company document obtained by Bloomberg

For now, Coinbase has been on a strategic march, launching new services, expanding into new horizons and showing no signs of stopping. Coinbase’s CEO thinks that the total number of people in crypto will reach one billion within the next five years.

Coinbase is certainly preparing for it.

Today, Coinbase is the largest cryptocurrency exchange in terms of users, with 25 million registered users and $7 million worth of cryptocurrencies traded on the platform every single day.

According to the November 2018 research report from the Blockchain Transparency Institute, Coinbase led the pack with 422,000 daily active users, with Binance trailing in second place with 313,000 daily active users. OKEx and Huobi barely made it over 100,000 daily active users, with 105,000 and 101,000 respectively.

A couple of weeks ago, Coinbase announced that it will potentially support 30 new crypto assets in the near future, stating on their blog: “We are continuing to explore the addition of new assets, and will be working with local banks and regulators to add them in as many jurisdictions as possible.”

Recently Coinbase launched its OTC trading desk for institutional customers and added free PayPal withdrawal for its users. Coinbase also announced the expansion of its trading platform to new markets in a move to aggressively push the market forward in the coming year. It has expanded to Lithuania, Iceland, Andorra, Gibraltar, Guernsey and the Isle of Man. Earlier this year, Coinbase partnered with Barclays Bank, the first agreement between a leading U.K bank and a cryptocurrency exchange. Coinbase acquired Paradex, a non-custodial trading site built on the 0x decentralized protocol.

Coinbase is the king of the digital currency jungle. Coinbase was the first U.S. cryptocurrency startup, to become a “unicorn” and to generate $1 billion in annual revenue. With 25 million customers, its comparable with brokerages like Charles Schwab. The press is buzzing about its potential IPO. For now, the cryptocurrency market is much lower from where it was in 2017. Lots of investors got burned, making them more cautious. When Coinbase decides to IPO and creates huge returns for VC investors, it will give investors a chance to interact with the digital currency market, through a public company.

For more about the Front Page Weekly CXO Briefing, please click here.

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Ilias Louis Hatzis is the Founder & CEO at Mercato Blockchain Corporation AG. He writes the Blockchain Weekly Front Page each Monday.

Basis shuts down. Will regulation kill crypto?

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Last week our theme was “The Action in China.”

Our theme for this week is “Basis shuts down. Will regulation kill crypto?

Basis, a cryptocurrency stablecoin, is shutting down and returning the capital to its investors because of regulation challenges. Basis, raised some $135 million from top VCs, but decided to shut down because of concerns that regulators would view its tokens as securities.

Ventures capitalists that lend funds to Basis were one-time Federal Reserve governor Kevin Warsh, longtime hedge fund manager Stan Druckenmiller, Digital Currency Group, NFX Ventures, Valor Capital, Bain Capital Ventures, GV, WingVC, Ceyuan, Andreessen Horowitz,one-time Lightspeed Venture Partners, Zhenfund, Sky9 Capital, Foundation Capital, and others.

Basis had a specific contract with investors defining how the majority of capital raised was required to be held. Most of the money was legally required by contract to be held in the currency in which it was contributed and could not be touched by the company until Basis launched its stablecoin.

2018 has been the year of the stablecoin. According to a report from Blockchain.com, the amount of stablecoins skyrocketed in 2018.

What is a stablecoin? A stablecoin is a form of cryptocurrency that is pegged to other stable prices or assets. Some of main advantages of stablecoins are that they are global, have no affiliation to a central bank and rarely are prone to price volatility.  But, one of biggest issues they face, is trying to establish if they are subject to national securities and money service laws.

One of the big themes at the recent G20 Summit in Buenos Aires was regulation:

“We will regulate crypto-assets for anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism in line with FATF [Financial Action Task Force] standards and we will consider other responses as needed.”

The summit also focused on taxation, mentioning that it is working on a “globally fair, sustainable and modern international tax system” based on tax treaties and transfer pricing rules.

The main issue governments have with crypto is that there are too many blind spots. No one can give a clear answer of what a cryptocurrency is. Is it an asset? How should it be taxed? How should it be monitored; How can we identify confidential transactions? Another big gray area, are ICO tokens.

For some time now, ICOs have been a headache for financial institutions. Initial Coin Offerings are a way for companies to raise money, by issuing tokens and selling them to the public for Bitcoin, Ethereum, other cryptocurrencies or fiat currency. In many cases, projects promise investors, not just the product they plan to develop, but speculative returns from the potential price of the token, when it lists on exchanges. But some companies that collected funds using an ICO, turn out to be scammers. The worse part is that they took the money and ran and never delivered the product.

The most infamous case is Tezos, that collected $230 million. A class-action lawsuit against the Tezos has been filed by a group of investors in the Supreme Court of San Francisco, accusing the the company of fraud and trade of unregistered securities. Tezos is not the only one facing a lawsuit, the list includes other high profile ICOs, like Paragon Coin, Cloud With Me and Latium Network.

Can governments protect investors from fraud?

The most fearsome of all regulators for the cryptocurrency world, is the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The SEC is waging a war on ICOs and in recent months its been handing out fines like its candy. The SEC’s 2018 report already mentions dozens of ongoing investigations, so virtually any startup that recently had an ICO is probably being investigated by the SEC.

In Singapore and Switzerland, central banks have issued guidelines for conducting an ICO and described cases when tokens are be defined as securities and thus must fall within the scope of the law. The Chinese government went even further and completely banned Chinese companies to hold token sales or its citizens from participate in them.

In the short-term, stablecoins are undoubtedly the key to mass-implementation of cryptocurrencies in everyday life. But, scalability and trust will be the biggest issues in 2019 and regulation will play a important role in the adoption of cryptocurrencies. Considering how popular stablecoins have become and the fact that they are very closely linked to fiat, it’s clear that financial regulators, will try to find a legal framework for stablecoins, especially the ones pegged to the U.S. dollar.

People have different opinions if crypto should be regulated or not. Some crypto supporters argue that regulatory control contradicts the philosophy of cryptocurrencies. Others believe regulation is a sign that cryptocurrencies are already accepted by authorities and regulation can only help them grow.

The key to successful regulation of cryptocurrencies is to ensure that it does not stifle innovation.

For more about the Front Page Weekly CXO Briefing, please click here.

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Ilias Louis Hatzis is the Founder & CEO at Mercato Blockchain Corporation AG. He writes the Blockchain Weekly Front Page each Monday.

Crumbling Behemoths: why banking size is a liability not an asset in the Blockchain Economy.

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In January 2008 I started writing a book called Crumbling Behemoths. I should have finished it. In October of that year, after the Lehman collapse, it could have been a bestseller. My experience in the Fintech engine room of core banking helped me see the fragility in what looked like an invulnerable system of giant global banks.  Here is the TLDR version that book, just after the 10 year anniversary of the Lehman collapse and just before the 10 year anniversary of Satoshi Nakamoto’s White Paper (January 3rd).

Banks are vertically integrated, tightly coupled, politically dependent entities. Most have been in business for hundreds of years. Their decline is inconceivable; like the decline of car manufacturing in Detroit, Blockbuster, bookshops, Kodak, etc, etc. Size gives some Banks great power today and size looks like an obvious asset on their balance sheet. However in the network age, their size is actually a liability.  This post explains why, with a focus on:

  • Legacy IT meltdowns and the liability of “technical debt”

 

  • Wells Fargo and the Creative Destruction 7 Act Play

 

  • Why Blockchain is the realisation of Coase’s post-Corporate vision

 

  • Satoshi’s vision of 7 billion banks is the long term threat

 

  • The networked small bank is the imminent threat

 

  • Regulators typically arrive about the time that technology is doing the job for them

 

  • Why Bailouts will not be possible next time

 

  • How Analog  Scale is fundamentally different from Network Scale

 

  • Trading Takeaway – how to profit from this insight

 

Legacy IT meltdowns and the liability of “technical debt”

Hello, my name is Bernard and I am a core banking system salesman. Yes that sounds like the intro to an AA meeting. i should say “was”, but in honour to AA I use the present tense.  My days in the engine room of Fintech, selling core banking systems to the biggest global banks for companies such as Misys, meant I was not surprised to witness the Legacy IT meltdowns and the gradual crumbling of the Bank Behemoths.. Those of us selling replacements for paper-based systems decades ago never imagined that those systems would still be operational in the 21st century. They are and now they have moved from the asset to the liability side of the Bank’s ledger.

Bankers often talk about the millions invested into IT as an asset. Anybody who writes code knows that software degrades over time and at a certain point that “technical debt” becomes a liability and not an asset. It is now cheaper to build the IT infrastructure for a startup bank, using open source and APIs, than it is to adapt Legacy IT for a modern world. The $ millions invested in IT now have a negative ROI.

I use terms such as assets, liabilities, technical debt and negative ROI is to make this accessible to non-technical bankers and investors. There is one technical concept that is critical but also easy for non-technical bankers and investors to understand, which is tight vs loose coupling.

Any programmer will tell you that a loosely coupled architecture via APIs accessible via networks is better than tightly coupled systems (aka “spaghetti code”).

The programming cost is not the issue. The big issue for the Behemoths, the reason they are crumbling is:

  • The banks cannot change their business model fast enough. Bank CXO teams are perfectly away of the threat of disruptive technology and that they must change their business model at a fundamental level. They know what they should do. The problem is that they send instructions to the engine room of their ship to go faster and to change direction to due West and the person in charge of the engine room tells them that if they shovel in a lot more coal they can increase speed by 10% and will take two hours to change direction to due West, but warn them that this means they will run out of coal before they arrive at the next port. Meanwhile the Bank CXO team in the captain’s tower sees a flotilla of small boats going due West at 10x their speed.
  • Loss of consumer trust. Consumers might be enraged by bailouts, but they still assume that banks are at least reliable and the only game in town. Some consumers read about Cyprus where the government unilaterally took money from their bank; this is “bailout in your face” (strangely described as a “bail-in”), but at least one can think “that is in some tiny far away island”.  Closer to home, a series of IT Meltdowns, such as at TSB and RBS, mean that consumers have days when they cannot get cash from an ATM or use their credit cards; banks are no longer “reliable”. Finally they hear from a friend who is raving about one these startup banks; the big old banks are no longer the only game in town.
  • Aggressive action that only makes it worse. This is what we saw in the Wells Fargo scandal.

Wells Fargo and the Creative Destruction 7 Act Play

The Wells Fargo fake accounts scandal was a more subtle version of the Cyprus bail-in. Money was taken out of your account, not by the government, but by your bank via a fee that you never actually authorised. This is Act 3 in the Creative Destruction 7 Act Play (described in Part 2, Chapter 1 of The Blockchain Economy book):

“Act 3. Denial. The changes are now real and the old guard management can see it, but they don’t know how to react so they reach for high pressure management to make the numbers work. In some cases, management also reach for creative accounting tricks to smooth out earnings and make it look as if nothing has changed (known as fraud in most circles). This Act can go on a long time as most investors work on surface numbers. A famous example of the Denial Act 3 was subprime mortgages that blew up in the Global Financial Crisis in 2008. For a long time the surface numbers looked good until a few nonconformists looked below the surface (watch The Big Short movie for an entertaining take on that story). A more recent example in Finance was the Wells Fargo fake accounts scandal (which was going on for a long time before it was uncovered). “

To understand why big Banks like Wells Fargo are under such pressure, one has to dig back to an obscure academic paper written in 1937.

Why Blockchain is the realisation of Coase’s post Corporate vision

Part 1, Chapter 14 of The Blockchain Economy book describes why Blockchain is the realisation of Coase’s post Corporate vision. Coase’s 1937 essay The Nature Of The Firm asked why hire employees instead of contracting tasks? His answer – a company exists because it is cheaper to do transactions within a company than outside. Blockchain has resurfaced this theory by dramatically reducing transaction costs.

The Internet seemed to be the  realisation of Coase’s post Corporate vision. However, although Dot Com and Social Media changed our world, that change was limited to exchanging content online.  The Internet was the perfect free copy copy machine. Blockchain enables us to exchange value online – where copying is not allowed (if I send you that asset I no longer have it).

This enables literally everybody on the planet to be their own bank. Satoshi’s vision of  7 billion banks (one for each person on the planet) is outrageous but not impossible.

Satoshi’s vision of 7 billion banks is the long term threat

Anybody can be their own bank. All you need is a wallet that can hold cryptocurrencies.

The Central Bank is encoded in the math (whether Deflationary for Bitcoin or mildly inflationary for Ethereum). You no longer need to trust a Central Bank and whoever guides their actions. You trust the math and the code, both of which you can verify.

Although most people won’t choose to be their own bank, it is the fact that it is possible that is such a wake-up call for big banks. This is the Napster moment. Napster proved that digital audio/video was possible. It was free and illegal. After that came cheap and legal in services such as iTunes and Spotify. Those services were only possible because the alternative of free illegal services such Napster and Kazaa was possible.    

This is why a network of small banks is the imminent threat

The networked small bank is the imminent threat

SIBOS is the big annual gathering of bankers organized by SWFT. At SIBOS 2016 in Geneva I attended a session on Blockchain and correspondent banking – The way to go? This was standing room only. My observation at the time (recorded on Fintech Genome) was that:

“The problem of the current dialogue about a Blockchain replacement of today’s correspondent banking network is very simple – correspondent banks are being written out of the script. Look at the panelists and you see a) technologists and b) global banks. Both agree that the future is bright.

Elsewhere in the conference there was a lot of talk about reducing the number of Correspondent Banks in your network. The driver was Compliance. You cannot have a Correspondent Bank in your network who does not comply with the latest regulations from governments related to tax, money laundering, terrorist financing and all the other bad actors who use money alongside the good actors – and these regulations get more onerous every day.

It is fashionable to say that Correspondent Banking is dead. This conflates the current incarnation of Correspondent Banking which is batch based with the concept of Correspondent Banking itself. I am convinced that Correspondent Banking will survive the transition to real time and that SIBOS will always be key to Correspondent Banking.

The Correspondent Banking is dead meme suits the global banks. It is inconvenient for them to deal with regional banks and much simpler to have a global network that is totally under their control. The technologists will deliver that for them. Voila – a handful of global banks control global trade.

Technically this is simple – really simple. Blockchain will be like Internet – we will use it invisibly every day. TCP/IP is not rocket science (but might have been perceived that way in 1996).

If you step outside the innovation echo chamber and talk to the regional banks you can sense the discomfort. They are being forced to consider a future without themselves in that future. Yet in the real world, these regional banks are prized by their customers.

Correspondent Banking will go real time. The 9,000+ member banks of SWIFT will keep the human relationships and just switch over to a new system.

One thing preventing small banks from competing is lack of equity capital. It is much easier today to buy one mega global bank that grew by “rolling up” lots of smaller banks. That is really the only option today for investors.  The gamechanger is new equity, whether from Security Tokens or traditional Equity Exchanges. That is why an unknown Community Bank filing for an IPO – Silvergate Bank – is so exciting.

Silvergate is traditional regulated bank offering services to the Blockchain Economy. It presages the future and its S-1 is data treasure trove for those seeking to understand that future.

I wrote at the start that “Banks are vertically integrated, tightly coupled, politically dependent entities”

I now want to focus on that last part about “politically dependent entities”. Banks are licensed by sovereign governments and Blockchain is inherently a stateless global network. We shall soon witness the loud bang that happens when an irresistible force meets an immovable object. Which brings us to the R word – Regulation.

Regulators typically arrive about the time that technology is doing the job for them

When 2008 happened, the regulators in America threw a complex rule book called Dodd Frank at the banks. For 10 years, the lawyers and regulators have worked through the details and now some elements seem to be up for negotiation. It has become a political football, just when technology may be making it irrelevant.

This has happened before. Regulators typically arrive about the time that technology is doing the job for them. Look at what happened in two earlier waves of technological disruption:

  • IBM was being regulated just when the world was moving from mainframes to PCs.
  • Microsoft was being regulated just when the world was moving from PCs to Internet.
  • Today Google and Facebook are being regulated just when the world was moving against all our data being used as a tool to control us. Note: this is happening right now, which makes it a bit harder to see than the two previous waves.

The problem is that in 2008, the technological disruption was still in the mind(s) of Satoshi Nakamoto. So the regulators resorted to the only thing they knew – a complex legal document.

When the next financial crisis hits, the discussion around bailouts and regulation will be quite different.

Why Bailouts will not be possible next time.

  • Populism has a political voice. The rise of extremism of both right and left is all over the globe will make it harder to bail out banks again.
  • Governments are running out of firepower to pump in more liquidity. For every loan there has to be a lender and at some point lenders worry about inflation from money printing. Lack of funds will make it harder to bail out banks again.
  • The disruptive alternative (Bitcoin) is now more mature and tested. People now have the tools take control over their own financial resources, regardless of what politicians say.

How Analog Scale is fundamentally different from Network Scale

Analog Scale, what most Big Banks have, is all about vertical integration, management hierarchy, secrecy and control.  In short, hierarchy.

Network Scale is all about networked partnerships through APIs, online networking, knowledge networks and verifiable transparency. In short, wirearchy.

The thesis of this post is that wirearchy beats hierarchy.

Cryptoeconomics takes this wirearchy to a new level.

In October 2014, I was privileged to be at an Ethereum MeetUp in London to hear Vitalik Buterin talk about:

“Cryptoeconomic Protocols In the Context of Wider Society”

That is right. This was about as interesting to 99.999% of the population as the discussions at the Homebrew Computer Club in the 1970s when the PC revolution was starting. At the time I was more conscious of witnessing history in the making (as I recorded here) than really understanding  cryptoeconomics. Today I see cryptoeconomics as an updated version of what one the greatest investor of the 20th century (Charles Munger) talked about, which is the power of aligning incentives. I knew this to be true from my years leading enterprise sales teams. What is different about cryptoeconomics is that it takes these incentives out of the closed world of the enterprise and makes them available to 7 billion people in a permissionless network.

We can already see Network Scale in the big winners in the Centralised Internet. What Vitalik Buterin was talking about in 2014 and is now making happen is Network Scale in the big winners in the decentralised Internet. As Trace Mayer puts it, this will be a once in a species level transfer of wealth.

Trading Takeaway – how to profit from this insight

Investors will start to sell/short banks & buy Bitcoin, Blockchain & Cryptocurrency. The banks will resist change and have a lot of clout, so shorting at first will only be for those banks who face traditional balance sheet problems (such as Deutsche Bank). Problems with consumer trust and regulators at banks such as Wells Fargo don’t seem to translate into stock price weakness.

That is because there is a difference between inevitable and imminent. The changes I am writing about maybe  inevitable but it is really tough to figure out timing. That is why the simpler strategy is to go long Bitcoin, Blockchain & Cryptocurrency; you can hold for as long as it takes for this to play out. The Bitcoin, Blockchain & Cryptocurrency tsunami is likely to follow the usual rule of disruptive change which is is that a) it takes longer than people think and b) the change when it happens is bigger than people think.

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Bernard Lunn is a Fintech deal-maker, investor, entrepreneur and advisor. He is the author of The Blockchain Economy and CEO of Daily Fintech.

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Blockchain Weekly Front Page: The Action in China

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Last week our theme was “Legacy Finance, Big Tech and Government move into Blockchain.”

Our theme for this week is “The Action in China

For more about the Front Page Weekly CXO Briefing, please click here.

In September 2017, the Chinese government banned ICOs, and a year later it banned crypto entirely. Everything related to crypto trading and investment has been banned, including news sites, social media accounts, events, and exchanges. In July, the Central Bank of China reported that the country’s cryptocurrency ban has been very successful, reducing Yuan trading activity to less than 1%, when it once accounted for more than 90% of global trading volume.

But can China continue to innovate in this space, while it has imposed a cryptocurrency ban?

Yes it can and it does.

At the end of March 2018, China had a total of 456 blockchain companies, which included security services, investment and financing, media and human resources services, platform services, hardware manufacturing, and industrial technology application services.

While protocols like Lightning Network and Tumblebit attempt to solve the Bitcoin scaling problems, Conflux, a Chinese company, claims to have solved the network’s speed limitations.

Conflux is a new protocol led by a group of professors, that counts among their ranks Andrew Yao, a recipient of the Turing Award, known as China’s “Godfather of Computer Science.” Conflux raised $35 million from notable investors, that include Sequoia China, Metastable, IMO Ventures, FreesFund, Rong 360, Shunwei Capital, F2Pool, and major crypto exchange Huobi.

Conflux is a fast, scalable and decentralized blockchain protocol that process concurrent blocks, without discarding any as forks. Conflux achieves a transaction throughput of 6,400 transactions per second, for typical Bitcoin transactions.

Conflux’s co-founder Fan Long, a University of Toronto professor, told Fortune“Conflux’s main idea is how to make the whole blockchain scalable. We’ve changed the structure of the blockchain so that it’s no longer a chain in the sense that it records each block based on what its parent block says.”

Another project out of China is led by Chinese cryptocurrency billionaire Li Xiaolai, known in China as a “Bitcoin evangelist.” He’s developing a new stablecoin that is expected to roll out in 2019. The project will operate within Hong Kong blockchain fund, Grandshores Technology. The upcoming stablecoin won’t be attached to the Chinese Yuan, instead it will follow the Japanese Yen.

Huawei, the Chinese tech giant and the world’s second largest smartphone maker, announced the launch of its Blockchain Service (BCS), in an official press release. Huawei’s new service solves many problems businesses face, when deploying a blockchain. The service allows entrepreneurs and developers around the world to create, deploy and manage blockchain applications on Huawei Cloud, at a blistering pace and cheaper cost.

Chinese mining companies are the undisputed global leaders, controlling more than 74% of the Bitcoin network’s hash rate. According to data from Genome, the PBoC has filed 41 blockchain patents. Chinese companies occupy six of the top ten spots for blockchain patents, with Alibaba filing 90 patents.

China is committed to blockchain innovation, doubling down on its $3 billion investment in the blockchain technology since the second quarter of 2018. Yet it’s ironic that Chinese citizens don’t have direct access to investment. Its decision to ban everything Bitcoin seems odd on the surface, but China wants to assert itself as a technology leader and blockchain, may be one way to do it.

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Ilias Louis Hatzis is the Founder & CEO at Mercato Blockchain Corporation AG. He writes the Blockchain Weekly Front Page each Monday.