National Post

TINY FIRM TAKES ONE HUGE LEAP IN BANKING

- Doug Alexander in Toronto

VersaBank Inc., a tiny lender led by a tech-savvy CEO with a penchant for planes and classic motorcycle­s, is building a virtual safety deposit box for cryptocurr­encies and other digital assets.

The firm is taking the lead in a global banking industry that’s been reluctant to venture into most things crypto. The London, Ont.-based bank plans to have its digital vault ready by June and offer the service to global customers.

“We’re using what banks are all about — safety and security — only what we’re doing now is saying that physical box in the basement is getting obsolete,” said David Taylor, chief executive officer of Canada’s smallest bank by assets.

“Most people’s really valuable assets are contained in some sort of digital format, whether it be a deed or a contract or a cryptocurr­ency.”

The move underscore­s a paradox of Canada’s financial system, which is dominated by the six large lenders.

While the banks are regularly regarded as among the world’s soundest, it’s also home to a boisterous junior stock market where new trends from blockchain to marijuana can quickly captivate investors.

VersaBank hired cybersecur­ity expert Gurpreet Sahota from BlackBerry Ltd. — the former smartphone maker long viewed as a world leader in security and encryption — to lead software engineers in designing its “VersaVault.”

It’ ll securely store digital assets on computer servers around the world. Like a safety deposit box, the bank won’t know what’s inside.

What’s different, though, is VersaBank can’t access the contents.

“Our differenti­ator in this market is to be secure and super private,” said Taylor.

“The bank wouldn’t have any kind of back door to open up the vault, we’re just providing the facility that folks could put their digital keys in.”

Numerous high- profile heists including last month’s theft of more than US$ 500 million from Japanese cryptocurr­ency exchange Coincheck Inc. illustrate the need for security.

Hackers typically steal money from crypto exchanges by gaining access to their internet- connected wallet that stores customer funds.

Large funds are showing interest in storing their assets in VersaVault since the company announced the plan last month, Taylor said. Pricing hasn’t been set, though it’ ll be expensive, he said.

VersaBank is building its vault as Bitcoin plunged below $ 6,000 on Tuesday for the first time since November, pulling down other digital tokens, as several U.S. banks said they’re halting cryptocurr­ency purchases on credit cards, with some citing risk aversion and a desire to protect customers.

VersaBank is an early mover among traditiona­l banks.

South Korea’s Shinhan Bank said in November it planned to start a bitcoin vault by mid year.

Outside banking, Palo Alto, California- based Xapo Inc. has offered clients secure storage for Bitcoin for about four years, while Goldmoney Inc., a Toronto-based firm that lets clients buy, sell and store precious metals in vaults in seven countries, started offering Bitcoin storage in September.

Taylor is no stranger to innovation. He introduced a branchless bank to Canada in 1993, four years before ING Groep NV arrived in the country to offer telephone banking as ING Direct. VersaBank, which has its roots as a trust in Saskatchew­an in 1979, still operates on a branchless electronic model, gathering deposits through a nationwide network of brokers and buying loan and lease receivable­s from non- bank financial firms while working with partners to offer behind-the-scenes financing for retail and small businesses.

“We’re a digital bank that has very little human interface and serves as a warehouse for assets and liabilitie­s, and makes a good spread in the middle,” Taylor said. “That’s banking in its essence.”

Taylor is an avid pilot and collects motorcycle­s — his 1969 Triumph Bonneville is his favourite. He lives in London. His 100-acre farm has a 2,000-foot landing strip used for his three prop planes, including a Cessna 337 he retrofitte­d with a Corvette car engine and called Skyvette.

Taylor’s banking career began in 1977, when he applied for a job at Bank of Montreal “as a lark” because he couldn’t find summer work in biology after getting his undergradu­ate science degree. He previously held a job as a prison guard.

VersaBank, with a market value of about $ 158 million and $ 1.73 billion in assets, has outperform­ed Canada’s big banks, with shares soaring 24 per cent this year versus the 2.9- per- cent decline of the eight- company S& P/ TSX Commercial Banks Index. Last year VersaBank rose 19 per cent compared to the 11-per-cent gain of the banks index. Taylor is now eyeing more growth.

“I’m happy to be a niche player, but can probably double the size we are in assets,” he said. “I think $3 billion is kind of a nice number.”

 ?? DEREK RUTTAN / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Chief executive David Taylor’s VersaBank is taking a lead role in an important segment of the global banking industry — safety and security.
DEREK RUTTAN / POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Chief executive David Taylor’s VersaBank is taking a lead role in an important segment of the global banking industry — safety and security.

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