Business Day

Viva the (responsibl­e and careful) revolution in financial markets

• If FTX saga is not ringing alarm bells, it should: the crypto and traditiona­l models are broken

- Connie Bloem ● Bloem is cofounder and MD of Mesh.Trade.

We have a new Wolf of Wall Street, epitomisin­g the unfettered bravado and unhindered greed that has stalked the mainstream financial markets for decades.

With the seemingly unconditio­nal support of institutio­nal investment houses, FTX centralise­d exchange founder Sam Bankman-Fried has fallen from grace. His demise highlights the urgency of a responsibl­e revolution to provide a real alternativ­e to traditiona­l financial markets, which have fallen victim to manipulati­on and fraud, perpetrate­d in centralise­d companies behind opaque layers of technology by some particular­ly bad actors.

In an eerie echo of the months and days leading up to the 2008 credit crunch, the financial world is at a precipice once again, except this time it is the global cryptocurr­ency market in the crosshairs, with billions in investment­s going up in smoke in the wake of fraud and capital mismanagem­ent. The fallout will be felt for a long time to come.

The spectacula­r collapse of FTX has sent shock waves up and down every alley of the financial world. FTX was involved in multiple sectors of the market. Not just cryptocurr­encies but traditiona­l assets such as stocks were traded on FTX’s centralise­d exchange, and hedge funds and venture capitalist­s invested their clients’ money in and on the exchange. Alameda Research, a trading company founded by BankmanFri­ed, was trading billions of dollars from FTX accounts, leveraging the exchange’s native token as collateral.

This crisis is not the fault of the blockchain technology that underpins cryptocurr­ency, it is the fault of humans repeating the same patterns of institutio­nal greed, opacity and fraud that led to the invention of crypto in the first place. Bad business is bad business, no matter the vehicle.

Nothing beats a good-quality, sound and transparen­t business model. The phrase “disruptive innovation” does not mean discarding the fundamenta­ls of running a good business.

The limitation­s prevalent in traditiona­l financial markets have reared their ugly heads again: centralisa­tion, uncollater­alised leverage and the absence of transparen­cy.

Make no mistake, this is not a story about a lone crypto-crook or the collapse of an instant billionair­e. If the FTX saga is not ringing alarm bells it should; it is the same pattern we have seen again and again within the traditiona­l financial system. It is the same story that inspired the Satoshi Nakamoto collective to create an alternativ­e to the traditiona­l financial markets in 2009.

It was the reason my team and I, as responsibl­e “market revolution­aries”, have been working over the past three years to create alternativ­e, decentrali­sed financial markets that do not benefit the few but service the many. This is a story about the philosophy of developing a decentrali­sed, transparen­t, trustless alternativ­e to what has become the norm.

The risks involved in how FTX managed its reserves and liquidity were compounded by the company being a centralise­d exchange. This provided a heady cocktail of concentrat­ion risk, a risk that arises through exposure to a single counterpar­ty, an absence of transparen­cy and market volatility. It forces us all to stop and look at the problem more closely.

Until recently the solution appeared to lie in more regulation of this sector, but a true decentrali­sed finance lens presents a different view.

The current market cycle has delivered many lessons, the most important being that both the crypto and the traditiona­l financial markets are fundamenta­lly broken and in desperate need of a revolution — a responsibl­e one. There must be a revolution moving us towards markets that are easy to access, transparen­t and efficient.

However, this is only possible if three key ingredient­s are present:

● Self-custody. If your assets are not always accessible with your keys, you don’t really own the assets. Beware of centralise­d exchanges (most of them) that don’t give you direct access to or full ownership of your assets. Take a lesson from the FTX fallout.

● Industry standards. Crypto assets and decentrali­sed finance markets need to find a set of standards that everyone can subscribe to — and fast. The work of the Intergover­nmental Fintech Working Group in SA is invaluable and noble. Principleb­ased regulation­s are a powerful tool to guide, and not stifle, the decentrali­sed finance industry.

● Auditable reserves. Customer funds are sacrosanct and must at all times be audited and never be used by centralise­d parties that present themselves as exchanges. You cannot mark your own homework.

These three principles should guide the responsibl­e revolution in an alternativ­e, decentrali­sed financial system where both retail customers and institutio­nal investors own their assets directly and are the captains of their own economic destiny.

Blockchain as a technology is tried and tested and without reproach, offering much-needed innovation in our industry. However, in the end it comes down to striking the right balance between this revolution­ary technology and a fit-for-purpose regulatory framework, to make both traditiona­l and decentrali­sed financial markets more accessible and safer for all.

We will keep pushing towards our objective of building the democratic and transparen­t financial markets of the future. But there’s no denying the irony inherent in the fact that this time it’s the crypto markets that are in need of a revolution.

IN AN EERIE ECHO OF THE MONTHS AND DAYS LEADING UP TO THE 2008 CREDIT CRUNCH, THE FINANCIAL WORLD IS AT A PRECIPICE ONCE AGAIN

 ?? /Reuters/File ?? Wolf of the Bahamas: Billions of dollars in investment­s have gone up in smoke in the wake of fraud and capital mismanagem­ent at Bahamas-based FTX and its associated companies.
/Reuters/File Wolf of the Bahamas: Billions of dollars in investment­s have gone up in smoke in the wake of fraud and capital mismanagem­ent at Bahamas-based FTX and its associated companies.

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