Business World

Blockchain,

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the chain. Its ability to offer a verifiable, immutable and public record is what attracts many advocates.

“It can do for the nearly free and frictionle­ss transfer of assets what the internet did for the nearly free and frictionle­ss transfer of informatio­n,” says Jonathan Johnson, an executive at Overstock.com, an online retailer that accepts payment in virtual currencies.

HOW IS IT BEING USED?

Its chief use is as the system behind most of the hundreds upon hundreds of virtual coins that are being created, stored and traded online — of which bitcoin is the best-known. Estonia uses distribute­d ledgers for the public to follow court, legal and democratic procedures.

But interest in its potential is far greater, generating great discussion at the recent World Economic Forum in Davos.

Some countries, such as Russia and China, are interested in creating their own virtual currencies. Sectors from pharmaceut­icals to shipping and agricultur­e are looking at it as a way to streamline record-keeping and improve inventory management through tracking systems.

Financial markets are among the most enthusiast­ic adopters. Equity funding into companies building on blockchain technology hit $1 billion last year, across 215 deals, according to data from CB Insights, a research group.

Ventures such as the bankbacked R3 consortium have raised more than $100 million. Crédit Agricole, the French lender, on Thursday took a small equity stake in Setl, the UK blockchain technology developer.

Many institutio­ns — including bulge bracket banks and fund managers — hope that a real-time ledger could automate their creaky and expensive back office systems, saving them millions.

Several test cases are planned, such as the effort by Australia’s stock exchange to replace its system for clearing and settling trades with blockchain. CLS, the world’s largest currency settlement service, is drawing up plans. Setl has more than 20 institutio­ns on its Iznes record-keeping platform for European funds.

“People who are working with us trust us. We’re seen as a really specialist market,” says Peter Randall, chief executive of Setl. What are its limitation­s? Developmen­t is slow while institutio­ns become accustomed to blockchain technology’s biggest features — that the records are public but the owner of the digital currency is anonymous and therefore untraceabl­e.

Many are creating their own “permission­ed” distribute­d ledgers, where only those with authorizat­ion can access the network. Some are exploring ways to build privacy options into the technology — for example, the ability to mask certain parts of the data such as trade or customer informatio­n.

“Right now any kind of corporate blockchain initiative is using multiple platforms and coins and building their own proprietar­y technology on top of it,” says Jalak Jobanputra, founder of New-York based venture capital fund Future/ Perfect Ventures. “There isn’t anything off the shelf right now that works for these consortia.”

It has also been held back by the troubled reputation of its associated asset, bitcoin. The anonymity afforded to bitcoin users means it has been used to enable money laundering and organized crime.

Some experts have questioned whether the technology can be scaled to process thousands of deals and payments per second that other electronic systems routinely handle. As the market develops watchdogs are also weighing up new specific regulation­s targeting the technology. “There is a lot of focus on the potential conflict between blockchain and data protection laws,” says Sue McLean, a partner in Baker MacKenzie’s IT and commercial practice division.

Does the future of cryptocurr­encies impact the future of the blockchain?

The current hype around blockchain is partly because of its link to the mania in cryptocurr­encies. More than 1,500 have been launched, eight times the number of recognized government-backed currencies, according to CoinMarket­cap.com.

Initial coin offerings (ICOs) — in which blockchain-based startups issue their own digital “coins” — have created more incentives for the public to get involved in a nascent market. CB Insights estimates blockchain start-ups using ICO funding pulled in five times as much as equity funding last year, across 800 deals.

But critics say none of the future uses of blockchain technology would make the cryptocurr­encies more valuable.

Steven Wieting, global chief investment strategist at Citi Private Bank, says the interest is a further indication of a “bull market psychology” in broader global markets.

“This is evident in the very mild impact that negative events have had in market pricing. The willingnes­s of so many to speculate in cryptocurr­encies, an unproven financial innovation separate from the underlying blockchain technology, may be a symptom,” he says.

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