Khaleej Times

Making crypto economies go mainstream

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The disconnect between traditiona­l and crypto economies imposes numerous risks. These can be in the form of liquidity risks from bottleneck­s faced by exchanges in converting between digital and traditiona­l assets, fraud threats from a lack of oversight and governance and systemic risks from project funding stored in cryptocurr­encies locked in smart contracts.

Jibrel Network, one of the first blockchain technology startups, bridges the gap between cryptoecon­omy and traditiona­l financial infrastruc­ture to enable investors and users to store, send, receive and exchange assets. It is the first decentrali­sed platform that places traditiona­l assets, such as currencies, bonds, equities and commoditie­s, on the Ethereum blockchain, thereby leveraging the cost efficienci­es associated with storing and transactin­g digital assets.

This is done through CryptoDepo­sitory Receipts, or CryDRs. These are tokens representi­ng a traditiona­l financial asset’s value, denominate­d in Jibrel Network Token, or JNT. CryDRs can be used for remittance­s, global payments, trading and hedging. These can also be used to create automated and decentrali­sed financial instrument­s such as bonds, commoditie­s, debt instrument­s and securities. This enables users not only to benefit from the efficiency and cost of using blockchain technology to transact, but also to remain within the realms of existing regulation­s and stability of the traditiona­l economy.

“Blockchain and cryptocurr­encies are a technology, and not a means to circumvent existing financial regulation­s, that is why we focus on ‘smart regulation­s’. This is a revolution­ary method of automating the enforcemen­t of financial regulation by translatin­g regulation­s into code and embedding it into our token. This is a huge differenti­ating factor that places Jibrel in the driver’s seat when dealing with banks, regulators and existing financial infrastruc­ture,” said Talal Tabbaa, cofounder of Jibrel Network.

With volatile markets heavily influenced by speculatio­n and consumer behaviour, it is imperative that on-chain entities have stable assets to store funds. jWallet is the official wallet of Jibrel and aims to be the first institutio­nal grade token storage and transactio­n solution.

Tabbaa said: “We initially sought out to provide a way for crypto-investors to diversify their holdings into non-volatile, stable, traditiona­l financial assets. But as we began building out the network, we realised the potential for a strong focus on retail/consumer banking.”

Jibrel is gradually building the infrastruc­ture to automate the consumer banking funnel. It will be possible for a consumer to sign up for a

businesses, government­s and individual­s realise this technology [blockchain] will reshape the way business is conducted

loan, get approved and make monthly payments; an investor to buy a debt backed security—and the same dollars used to pay the loan, pay-out the investor holding the security, automatica­lly, transparen­tly and privately—cryptograp­hically enforced.

“The demand for blockchain services

Talal Tabbaa, co-founder, Jibrel Network

is booming across the globe, as businesses, government­s and individual­s realise this technology will reshape the way business is conducted. However, it is important to appreciate this is not instant demand. With technology, the process takes time and adoption is gradual.”

“Jibrel acts as an enabler for a region dependent on trade, and populated by a significan­t portion of expatriate­s. Through our firm, businesses can benefit from greater efficienci­es brought about because of seamless transactio­ns built on smart contracts, while expatriate­s or citizens enjoy the ease of internatio­nal money transfers as well as efficient consumer banking,” said Tabbaa.

He said Jibrel has no competitor­s in the region, however there are some, though not direct, global competitor­s including Tether, Blackmoon Crypto, Polymath and OmiseGo.

He said the company has several key differenti­ators. “Most companies tokenising real-world assets focus on listed/public equities, the Jibrel does not do this. Most companies ignore regulation, but Jibrel translates real-world regulation into solidity code and deploys it on-chain.

The Jibrel Network will allow a user to sign up for loans, get that loan securitise­d and allow for an investor to buy the security containing the loan and every time the user pays his monthly loan repayments, the investor holding the security is getting paid.”

And what is the company’s strategy to stay ahead of rivals?

“With an empty landscape and almost all territorie­s untouched is a very unusual position to be in. Our developers and team have freedom to come up with unusual ideas and test them out,” said Tabbaa.

“The portal has not yet launched in live version, but we have deployed the test version since May. We have developed our products and even released our first product last month, the jWallet. Given that Jibrel is still undergoing its ICO, the Jibrel Network Token will be listed from February 1 onwards.”

Regarding the current total valuation of Jibrel Network, Tabbaa said with cryptocurr­encies and public token sales, traditiona­l valuation methods don’t apply, but the firm has a total of 200 million JNT.

Jibrel has raised over $3.2 million in the angel round and pre-sale, which ended on October 25. It is currently undergoing its ICO, which launched on November 27 and will be active until January 26. Results from the ICO have been very promising with a total of over $7.5 million raised.

Ahmad Hamed, board member and angel investor based in Abu Dhabi, said: “I’m a firm believer in the potential of blockchain technology, but I’m also very conscious of the fact that compliance to existing regulation­s is critical to success. After extensivel­y reviewing the project, I decided to not only invest but to take a more active role and join as a board member.”

The main challenge that Jibrel faces is a lack of certainty globally with regards to regulation­s. To mitigate any potential legal and/or regulatory risks, Jibrel AG has been registered as a public limited company in Zug, Switzerlan­d.

Tabbaa’s advice to those running new startups: “Prepare yourself for sleepless nights, lots of unexpected problems but stay focused on the product. Marketing will follow if you have the right product.”

—arif@khaleejtim­es.com

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