First presented at an AFA panel on January 4, 2016 in San Francisco: http://www.afajof.org/details/page/8357781/2016-Meeting-Program.html
Notes and references for the slides: http://www.ofnumbers.com/2016/01/06/afa-presentation-cryptocurrencies-blockchains-and-the-future-of-financial-services/
Copyright 2016 R3CEV, All Rights Reserved.
2. R3: AFA Panel
The hype surrounding blockchains has recently
“jumped the shark”
3. R3: AFA Panel
The topic is now broad enough that it has something
for multiple academic interest groups
4. R3: AFA Panel
Financial researchers may find the non-
cryptocurrency side to be of interest
– In what ways can cryptographically-secured transactions utilizing shared ledgers
change how the middle and back offices operate?
– If bilateral transactions can now take place atomically, without a third party, what
impact could this have on traditional reconciliation processes?
– What advantages and disadvantages would faster clearing and settling
provide in the – for example – OTC derivatives marketplace?
– Real time confirmations to improve intraday capital allocation per trade?
– Real time settlement in controlled rollout to reduce messaging costs for delivery?
– Lower cost of asset liability management through improved commercial paper
and repo?
5. R3: AFA Panel
Economists may find some untapped research into
the cryptocurrency angle
– [Note: today nearly all cryptocurrencies are effectively public goods]
– The long-term sustainability of public goods such as Bitcoin and Ethereum
(e.g., a public blockchain largely relies on seigniorage subsidies)
– Coordination/collective action problems of development, governance and
“upgrades”
– The preponderance of users to simply “hoard” (or “hodl”) the native currency
instead of utilizing it as a daily medium-of-exchange
• (e.g., once ‘long-chains’ and arbitrage are accounted for, relatively low on-
chain velocity)
6. R3: AFA Panel
Trade-offs when designing systems
- If Satoshi Nakamoto had wanted to build shared ledgers for financial
institutions, it would not look at all like Bitcoin does today
- Many design characteristics that are needed in certain environments
and unneeded in others
- For instance, if all participants on a network are known and trusted
due to legal contracts and cryptographic signatures, then there are
different security parameters to design around (e.g., POW is
unneeded)
7. R3: AFA Panel
Trade-offs cont’d
- For public blockchains: while gaining censorship-resistance through
global energy-based “scratch-off-puzzles,” in the case of Bitcoin, one
trade-off comes in the form of probabilistic settlement
- That is to say, given an economic incentive, no on-chain settlement on
a public blockchain is 100% final due to potential block reorganization
attacks
8. R3: AFA Panel
Probabilistic settlement finality: not helpful
“Directive 98/26/EC is the Settlement Finality Directive that seeks to minimise
systemic risk by ensuring that any payment deemed final according to the system
rules is indeed final and irreversible, even in the event of insolvency proceedings.
If this definitive finality were not the case, the insolvency of one participant could
undo transactions deemed settled and open up a host of credit and liquidity issues
for the other participants in the payment system. This translates into systemic risk
and undermines confidence in all the payments processed by the system.
Thus, by ensuring definitive settlement, the concept of finality fosters trust in the
system and reduces systemic risk. This makes it one of the most important
concepts in payments. As a result, it is a concept applied to all clearing and
settlement systems, including for instance settlement and high-value payment
system Target2 and bulk SEPA clearing system STEP2.”
9. R3: AFA Panel
Regulated financial industry has spent past 20 years
trying to create definitive settlement finality
- The trend over the past two decades through legislation such as Dodd-Frank and EMIR
has been around the goal of reducing and removing risks and increasing stability in
the clearing and settlement process
- By trying to (re)add probabilistic finality back into the process, cryptocurrency-based
distributed ledgers may be a non-starter for adoption and regular use by regulated
financial institutions
– The issue is further compounded in the cryptocurrency ecosystem in that validators (colloquially
referred to as “miners”) in the event there is a problem do not have end-user license agreement
(EULA), terms of service (TOS) or service-level agreement (SLA) for guarantees
• Yet if a SLA is created, then you now have trusted parties using an untrusted network, creating
a “permissioned-on-permissonless” situation; might as well use a “permissioned network” in
that case
11. R3: AFA Panel
Evolving marketplace / divergence
- Based on public announcements, external investment in
cryptocurrency-specific startups showed a marked decrease in 2H
2015 with almost nothing ($~4 million) raised in Q4 2015
- Instead, venture funding has for the time being moved towards non-
cryptocurrency distributed ledger startups focused on building tools
and applications for financial institutions
14. R3: AFA Panel
R3 is a commercial fintech company
- Designing a shared ledger fabric that is built for purpose and
customized for regulated financial institutions
- In looking at the existing landscape the past two years, none of the
available off-the-shelf technology met both the functional and non-
functional requirements
- For instance, a lot of the existing tech is based on forks of
cryptocurrencies which again, were designed for specific
environments that regulated financial institutions do not operate in
15. R3: AFA Panel
Open research questions for the new side of the
industry
- When designing new financial infrastructure, how to manage the
trade-offs of scalability and privacy (e.g., confidentiality of
transactions)? Is there a “silver bullet?”
- How much does “in-sourcing” of the reconciliation process actually
save overall? (e.g. how many bps can be saved?)
- When does definitive settlement finality occur on a shared ledger?
- How to build a shared ledger system in which governance is still not
fully centralized from nuts to bolts?
16. R3: AFA Panel
Fedcoin / State-issued digital currency
Fedcoin by JP Koning (2014)
Fedcoin: On the Desirability of a Government Cryptocurrency by David Andolfatto
(2015)
A Central Bank “cryptocurrency”? An interesting idea, but maybe not for the reason
we think by Richard Brown (2015)
Which Fedcoin? by Robert Sams (2015)
Fedcoin—how banks can survive blockchains by Robin Winkler (2015)
*Centrally Banked Cryptocurrencies by George Danezis and Sarah Meiklejohn
(2015)
This is an abbreviated presentation based on R3CEV research first publicly shown at the Gaiax – Blockchain University event “Blockchain Summit” held in Tokyo on December 18, 2015: http://gaiax-blockchain.com All citations and references can be found in the notes. Copyright R3CEV 2015 All Rights Reserved.