CONTRIBUTORS

Sandy Kaul
Head of Innovation
Franklin Templeton
Innovative technologies associated with the crypto domain are beginning to cross over and be piloted as part of the traditional financial infrastructure. Established intermediaries and servicers are exploring the utilization of blockchains, smart contracts, oracle networks, and tokenization, often with the explicit support and guidance of local regulators. This marks the first time in nearly 50 years that new approaches are being explored that would foundationally alter the way in which securities markets and payments operate.
Today’s financial market infrastructure was introduced in the early 1970s in response to the Paper Crisis that engulfed Wall Street in the late 1960s. That era’s innovative technology—computers—were introduced to re-engineer the securities industry. Innovations introduced at that time resulted in new types of intermediaries (central securities depositories, central counterparties and securities settlement systems) as well as new processes (book-order entry of securities to be held in street name, multi-lateral netting and delivery versus payment).
These capabilities have successfully supported the securities and funds industries for decades. Yet, there are shortcomings to how the system operates, particularly when compared to crypto markets.
Unlike the current securities settlement process that kicks off at the close of each day’s trading, requires multiple reconciliations, and carries on for several days beyond trade date, crypto markets are open 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year. Every trade settles as soon as it can be independently verified that the buyer has sufficient money in their wallet to pay for the transaction and that the seller has the asset in their possession to deliver. Both the money and the asset reside on the same ledger and are exchanged as soon as the transaction is affirmed—typically within minutes.
A 2023 report from the Global Financial Markets Association (GFMA) and the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) found that using blockchain and re-engineering the current financial market infrastructure could unlock ~US$20 billion annually in global clearing and settlement costs and free up approximately US$100+ billion in collateral.1
Europe has taken an early lead in testing these new technologies via the EU Pilot Regime launched in 2023. Euroclear has announced the launch of a new blockchain to facilitate securities settlement after demonstrating their ability to do simultaneous payment and settlement of tokenized bonds using digital currencies.2 Europe has also begun rolling out an EU-wide digital wallet system to house both digital currencies and digital assets.3
The United Kingdom has announced new guidelines for the tokenization of registered funds.4 Hong Kong SAR and the Hong Kong Monetary Authority created a new blockchain to issue and facilitate the payment and settlement of green bonds that embed smart contracts programmed to monitor an issuer’s climate-related metrics.5 Singapore announced Project Guardian that will engage financial market participants and regulators across a suite of tokenized investment offerings all recorded on blockchain.6
Experimentation is likely to accelerate in 2024. 130 countries representing 98% of the global economy are now exploring blockchain-based, digital versions of their currencies. Almost half are in advanced development, pilot, or launch.7 Established industry players like SWIFT are collaborating with emerging crypto providers such as Chainlink—an oracle network that delivers data to smart contracts—to enable communications and verification of transactions across various blockchains.8
Meanwhile, the United States, Mexico, and Canada will reduce the window for equities settlement to T+1 in May 2024. The DTCC has already introduced a blockchain to help facilitate securities settlement in this shortened window.9 A survey from Citi Securities Services found that 87% of respondents see central bank digital currencies being used to support shortened security settlement cycles within the next two years.10
Tracking developments in 2024 to determine how rapidly these experiments progress will be critical. Europe is expected to decide by 2026 whether to officially migrate its financial market infrastructure to these new technologies,11 and other regions and nations are likely to follow their lead.
Endnotes
- Source: “Impact of Distributed Ledger Technology.” Boston Consulting Group, GFMA. May 2023.
- Source: “Euroclear further advances its DLT strategy with investment in Finality.” Euroclear. March 3, 2022.
- Source: Schickler, Jack. “Euroclear May Launch Digital Bond Settlement Platform This Year, Staffer Says.” CoinDesk. March 30, 2023.
- Source: Hunt, James. “UK investment funds get green light for tokenization.” The Block. November 24, 2023.
- Source: “Project Genesis 1.0: Prototype digital platforms for green bond tokenisation.” Bank for International Settlements. November 15, 2022.
- Source: “JP Morgan, DBS, SBI Digital Asset complete DeFi tokenization trials on public blockchain.” Ledger Insights. November 2, 2022.
- Source: Jones, Marc. “Study shows 130 countries exploring central bank digital currencies.” Reuters. June 28, 2023.
- Source: “Swift explores blockchain interoperability to remove friction from tokenised asset settlement.” Swift. June 6, 2023.
- Source. “DTCC’S Project ION Platform Moves to Development Phase Following Successful Pilot with Industry.” DTCC. September 15, 2023.
- Source: Sarkar, Arijit. “CBDCs offer faster settlements: Citi survey of global securities firms.” Cointelegraph. August 23, 2023.
- Source: Jones, Huw. “EU to set out legal underpinnings for a digital euro.” Reuters. June 26, 2023.
WHAT ARE THE RISKS?
Blockchain and cryptocurrency investments are subject to various risks, including inability to develop digital asset applications or to capitalize on those applications, theft, loss, or destruction of cryptographic keys, the possibility that digital asset technologies may never be fully implemented, cybersecurity risk, conflicting intellectual property claims, and inconsistent and changing regulations. Speculative trading in bitcoins and other forms of cryptocurrencies, many of which have exhibited extreme price volatility, carries significant risk; an investor can lose the entire amount of their investment. Blockchain technology is a new and relatively untested technology and may never be implemented to a scale that provides identifiable benefits. If a cryptocurrency is deemed a security, it may be deemed to violate federal securities laws. There may be a limited or no secondary market for cryptocurrencies.
Digital assets are subject to risks relating to immature and rapidly developing technology, security vulnerabilities of this technology, (such as theft, loss, or destruction of cryptographic keys), conflicting intellectual property claims, credit risk of digital asset exchanges, regulatory uncertainty, high volatility in their value/price, unclear acceptance by users and global marketplaces, and manipulation or fraud. Portfolio managers, service providers to the portfolios and other market participants increasingly depend on complex information technology and communications systems to conduct business functions. These systems are subject to a number of different threats or risks that could adversely affect the portfolio and their investors, despite the efforts of the portfolio managers and service providers to adopt technologies, processes and practices intended to mitigate these risks and protect the security of their computer systems, software, networks and other technology assets, as well as the confidentiality, integrity and availability of information belonging to the portfolios and their investors.
Any companies and/or case studies referenced herein are used solely for illustrative purposes; any investment may or may not be currently held by any portfolio advised by Franklin Templeton. The information provided is not a recommendation or individual investment advice for any particular security, strategy, or investment product and is not an indication of the trading intent of any Franklin Templeton managed portfolio.
