Financial institutions are expected to spend over $1bn on blockchain projects in 2017, making it one of the fastest developing enterprise software markets of all time according to a report by Magister Advisors. Much has been made of the blockchain, the name given to the underlying technology of the Bitcoin cryptocurrency, yet these systems are not new. SWIFT Institute took the opportunity to speak to two leading thinkers in the area of shared distributed ledger systems: Michael Mainelli, co-founder and Chairman of the commercial think-tank Z/Yen and Emeritus Professor of Commerce at Gresham College, London, and Leda Glyptis, newly appointed Director at Sapient based in London, focused on providing digital business transformation consulting services.
Utility vs. business value
Having built a shared distributed ledger system 20 years ago, Professor Mainelli can attest that this technology is most definitely not new. Yet banks, discovering the existence of blockchain through Bitcoin, have only recently started to realise the possibilities such technology can provide. Talking to Mainelli, he contended that two concurrent developments had been occurring. Firstly, people were coming to the realisation that there could be a multitude of ledgers responsible for a multitude of purposes, potentially in the several billions, due to the expected growth of the Internet of Things. Secondly, companies within the financial services industry were beginning to grasp the fact that these systems were relatively easy to build, meaning that banks could construct a shared distributed ledger themselves thereby doing away with the role of a trusted third party. Mainelli pointed out that the, “Banks are on the cusp of change, but sadly what is driving them into this space is fear.”
Glyptis agreed saying, “In the past year we have seen the industry move from panic and disbelief to realisation that the technology is real and very powerful.” Adjustments, however, would need to be made to the original Bitcoin blockchain system in order to be made fit-for-purpose for the financial services industry. It is not likely, for example, that banks would share information on a public blockchain, rather the assumption is that they would exist as gated communities. Glyptis pointed out that whilst established industry players were now much more comfortable in exploring the possibilities of blockchain, the problem remains in the short term of the expense with running parallel infrastructures. Banks, eager to stay competitive, would need to further explore where the line between a utility (and associated economies of scale) and providing business value might lie.
Standardisation
Industry consortiums are beginning to provide thought leadership on the topic, nevertheless, there will be limitations as to what can be achieved. In order to build a shared ledger, one has to share – which makes for cautious conversations. Mainelli commented that whilst 30 banks had signed up to a recent, well-publicised cross-industry initiative, they had yet to decide upon any firm use cases. Glyptis noted that an agreement over a common architecture was “not nothing” and she felt it was right to have API standards driven by practitioners. She believed, however, that whilst standards were important, functionality of the system as a whole should first be determined before the drafting of specifications.
“Trust spectrum” and technology debt
We asked whether the blockchain was limited to certain types of financial services transactions. Glyptis was candid in responding that at this point we simply did not know all the different variations that a blockchain system could be used for. She did warn that it was critical the industry should not cut corners at this juncture with regards to properly thinking through what future configurations might be needed. Glyptis commented, “We need to minimise technical debt, meaning we need to ensure that our chosen stack is not limited in terms of capabilities. Some blockchain companies have gone down the route of designing capabilities to suit functions of today, but I feel that this approach would limit our imagination in terms of what we could eventually do.”
Mainelli explained the best way to approach the issue was by imagining a spectrum of trust with the left-hand side designated as ‘low trust’ and the right-hand side as ‘high trust’. On the extreme left would sit a structure built on very low trust and open membership – representing Bitcoin or Ripple. Other examples at this left-hand end of the spectrum include an open public-facing blockchain system, Ethereum, currently trying to build in smart contracts and faster transaction times, however, this has proven expensive to maintain. In high-trust environments, on the other end of the spectrum, players have historically gone to a central counterparty or exchange which typically charge high fees for either membership or associated market data. With the introduction of blockchain technology, however, no one body would own the data, rather it would be collectively owned, thereby reducing the potentially monopolistic position of a central counterparty. Mainelli continued, “So in answer to the question about the types of non-payment transactions that are suited to mutual distributed ledgers, it is most of them within regulated financial services. For almost all non-payment transactions, e.g. time-stamping, regulatory reporting, standing data updates, proof-of-identity, or even asset transfer (with payments separate), tokens are not needed. Once you remove the tokens or coins, you realise there are enormous varieties of shared distributed ledgers. Without tokens, some of our ledgers can handle a billion transactions per day.”
A tokenless future
Mainelli believed that the role of shared distributed ledger systems in financial services would be quite different to that provided by a cryptocurrency system. He outlined the possible options for designing a blockchain system, for example, whether the system should (1) be open for reading or closed, (2) have permissioned or permissionless participants, (3) represent a fully or mildly distributed ledger, or (4) have a wide choice of validation mechanisms. It is expected that the financial services industry would for the most part decide upon a closed, permissioned system, one that would exist within a regulated market with an identifiable regulator who would determine which players would be allowed to operate within that community. Once these options were chosen, the idea of producing a proof-of-work validation mechanism – the equivalent of a cryptocoin (e.g. a token) – would seem a bit redundant. Participants would also have further options to consider, for example, the setup of a single party system with the regulator effectively becoming the master node, or the establishment of identity systems and voting mechanisms. Each shared distributed ledger could be set up with individual specifications, but it was clear that systems without a validation mechanism would be much cheaper to run because they would be based on simpler rules. “I don’t see why you would want to have this huge overhead if it’s not adding value,” Mainelli concluded.
Furthermore, the role of a trusted third party would fundamentally change. Whilst from the outside the system would appear to be accessed in a similar fashion to that of a central database, the data would actually be retrieved from completely different servers because the system would be technically decentralised. The central party would therefore lose its control of the functions of storing data (preserve) and prevention of double selling (safeguard), but it would still maintain a role in validating transactions. It would follow that the regulatory role of a third party would remain intact, though the commercial element of selling market data would likely disappear. “Trusted third parties are having to think about the relative benefits of what they do; validate, safeguard, preserve,” maintained Mainelli. “It is similar to a central phone system moving onto a Skype platform. The weight shifts from providing cable to building a community to chat with. A certain party would still need to hold responsibility for access to the community and they would also need to verify the transactions on the ledger. Identity services rise in importance. A trusted third party would be able to do this much more cheaply and quickly using a shared distributed ledger system than they have been able to in the past.”
Fifty-one per cent
One aberration in the structure of the Bitcoin blockchain system is that if one player were to gain over 51% of the computing power used to verify transactions, it would then have the ability to add on new, potentially invalid transactions. A disincentive, however, is naturally inbuilt within the Bitcoin system because it is extremely costly to obtain this amount of computing power. Yet if the validation mechanism were to be removed as advocated by Professor Mainelli, we were wondering what would then prevent manipulation of the system. Mainelli confirmed that whilst the technology took away the ability to alter a historic transaction, risks still exist. A trusted third party would still be needed in order to maintain the integrity of the community in terms of preventing false new entries.
Glyptis believed that it would be naive to assume that any system would be impervious to meddling. A blockchain system would be much harder to tamper with because it minimised the amount of time settlements would remain in limbo. She continued, “Once the design of the system would be more or less established, you could then build your security, assumptions, tests and harnesses around it. This process is part of discovery. It is something we have not done in this industry for a very long time.”
Not a blockchain provider
Looking forward, the development of blockchain technologies represents an opportunity for greater efficiency, transparency and democratisation. Reconciliation would become a thing of the past and regulatory transparency would be remarkably improved. Mainelli was of the opinion that overall the banks would not do too badly from a switchover to blockchain systems because they could still provide the valuable trusted third party role.
Glyptis foresaw the iteration of this maturity in that fintech start-ups providing niche services to incumbents would no longer define themselves as a blockchain providers, rather they would simply be leveraging the best-of-breed distributed ledger technology for functionality. She speculated that this could prove to be the future tipping point for the large banks when they would realise that most of their technology providers have already moved to a distributed ledger capability, so they might as well convert the rest of their systems. Glyptis elaborated, “We are embarking on this journey because it has captured our imaginations. It is something that can change the way we live and it can actually bring the exchange of value back into the real world that we have not had in over a century.“