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How Blockchain Can Disrupt Financial Services

This table below highlights how blockchain can disrupt various aspects of the financial services industry.

FunctionCurrent ProcessFuture ProcessImpacted
Security and Digital Identity – Compliance (KYC)The Know Your Customer (KYC) regulation is an integral part of global anti-money laundering (AML) efforts. Compiling and maintaining these databases is expensive for financial services; this can lead to duplication of effort and can delay transactions.If digital identities are recorded on a blockchain shared ledger, an individual can add devices to their identity and add authorization to transact on their behalf. Verifiable and robust identities, cryptographically secured
blockchain technology could provide a single digital source of ID information, allowing for the seamless exchange of documents between banks and external agencies. This would likely result in automated account opening and reduced resources and costs, while maintaining the legally required privacy of data.
All financial services firms, payment card networks, regulators
Cross-border PaymentsCross-border payments use SWIFT messaging. Fees are leveraged by multiple intermediaries.BBVA cleared a real money transfer between Spain and Mexico in minutes. One-fee
Smart contracts can be coded to reflect any data-driven business logic. For example:
•Cross-border transactions
•Digitalizing letters of credit
•Loan repayments
Consumer banks, commercial banks
Clearing & SettlementCentralized clearing and settlement for all financial instruments. Settlement can take from days to weeks, depending on the complexity of the transaction.Settlement can be done in minutes using blockchain.

A fundamental advantage of a distributed ledger system, in which no single company has control, is that it resolves problems of disclosure and accountability between individuals and institutions whose interests are not necessarily aligned. It gives each member of the network far greater and timelier visibility of the total activity.

DTCC has already proven that complex post-trade events inherent to credit default swaps (CDS) can be managed with distributed ledger technology in a permissioned, distributed, peer-to-peer network.
Investment banking, asset management, corporate banking, hedge funds, ForEx trading, clearinghouses, central banks, regulators
Transfer of Ownership (Contracts, Titles)Transferring title of a property or negotiating contractual terms for financing, funding and loads is a long and onerous process with multiple intermediaries, include the legal profession.Securities based on payments and rights that are executed according to predefined rules can be written as smart contracts.

A smart contract is any contract that can automatically enforce itself without the need for a trusted intermediary. Any contract can be a smart contract if the terms of the contract can be automated. The blockchain assures that everybody is seeing the same thing at the same time, which negates the need for trust.
All banks, legal profession, real estate industry, regulators
Asset ManagementEach party in the trade lifecycle (e.g., broker dealers, intermediaries, custodians, clearing and settlement teams) currently keeps its own copy of the same record of a transaction, creating significant inefficiencies and room for error.Blockchain technology would provide an automated trade lifecycle in which all parties to the transaction would have access to the exact same data about a trade. This would lead to substantial infrastructural cost savings, effective data management and transparency, faster processing cycles, minimal reconciliation, and a reduced need for brokers and intermediaries.Asset management banks, broker-dealers, custodians
Smart Assets (Supply Chain/Trade Finance)Primary pain points for supply chain firms are: no visibility of payments, long payment schedules, demand management.Blockchain provides a system of trusted records that addresses all three.
Digitizing letters of credit and bills of lading facilitates a smart asset tracking system. Tracking assets that are rich in data can be turned into information for corporate clients.
Financing firms, supply chain industry
LendingMultiple intermediaries and fees for bank loans, mortgages, credit card debt, government bonds, muni bonds, asset-back securities Both loan and collateral can be stored in a blockchain. A smart contract can automatically revoke access to the collateral if the terms of the loan are broken.

Debt can be issued, traded and settled on the blockchain. Improves small business lending and lending for the unbanked (Approx. 2bn – World Bank).
Commercial banking, consumer banking, payment card network, money transfer services, telecommunications, regulators
FundingFunding and investing in an asset, IPOs, dividends, capital appreciation, rental incomePeer-to-peer financing, recording of corporate actions, automatic payment of dividends, smart contracts for title registries. Contracts that monitor the performance of digital or non-digital assets can also be used as futures, forwards, swaps, and options.Investment banking, corporate banking, real estate, legal
InsuranceManaging risk, derivatives, insuring assetsDecentralized markets for insurance, more transparent derivativesInsurance, risk management, brokerages, corporate banks, clearinghouses, regulators
GovernanceAccounting for valueA distributed ledger will mean real-time audit and financial reporting capabilities. Transparency of the blockchain improves regulatory management.Audit, asset management, regulators, banks
Recording and storing transactions and custodyCentralized recording and storage of financial assets, currencies, commodities for all types of accounts Cryptographic mathematical equations and immutable blockchain secures recording and storing of all transactions. Will reduce need for typical financial services accounts (brokerage, checking, savings, etc.).Consumer banks, Investment banks, brokerages, asset management, regulators

If you are interested in learning more about blockchain, download our new guide titled “Getting Ahead with Blockchain in Financial Services.

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Maura Holland, Senior Program Manager, Financial Services, Perficient

Maura Holland joined Perficient in 2013 via the acquisition of ForwardThink Group. Her areas of focus include program management, change management, business process redesign, and strategic operations. Maura has more than 25 years of experience in wealth management, investment banking and consumer banking, serving in corporate and consulting roles. She has successfully delivered projects for diverse clients, such as Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, and the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC).

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