Technology
Blockchain Is "A Solution Seeking A Problem", Says Barclays
In light of a new paper by Barclays examining crypto-currencies and the technology underpinning them, this publication spoke to a blockchain expert to get his take on the matter.
UK-based bank Barclays has weighed in
on blockchain, the
technology behind crypto-currencies, saying it is “a solution
still seeking a problem”.
Despite a “tremendous hype” surrounding blockchain and
crypto-currencies, such as bitcoin, the bank sees “little
likelihood of widespread adoption in the near future,” Barclays
said in a report published yesterday.
The lender, which has a large wealth management division, said
broader adoption of crypto-based technologies “faces critical
challenges and strong incumbents”.
“At present, existing technologies appear to be sufficiently
good, or even better, to deter broad crypto-technology adoption
in money and finance,” Barclays said, suggesting the technology
offers a solution for problems that do not currently exist in
financial services.
Put simply, a blockchain is a distributed digital ledger kept on
a network comprising thousands of powerful computers. There are
hundreds of variations of blockchain technology, with each
performing different functions. Transactions stored on a
blockchain are indelible, and advanced cryptography is said to
offer a high level of security.
Widespread adoption faces four main challenges, according to
Barclays: acceptance and trust; sovereignty and regulation;
privacy; and irreversibility. The last point refers to
blockchain’s inability to reverse a transaction once it has been
executed.
The bank did, however, examine five areas of money and finance
where blockchain “may hold promise” - smart contracts,
asset custody, settlements, payments and fiat money
substitutes.
It concluded, though, that “incumbent technologies retain
significant advantages over crypto-technologies at their current
state of development”.
Blockchain rose to fame in 2009 as the technology underpinning
bitcoin, the first and most well-known crypto-currency.
Last year saw bitcoin’s meteoric rise as its value rocketed from
under $1,000 to over $20,000 in less than a year, before
retreating back to around $7,000 in today’s market.
While banks have generally steered clear of crypto-currencies in
spite of their spot in the limelight, they have spent millions of
dollars exploring the best use cases for blockchain technology in
the hope that it could save them billions of dollars a year in
the long run.
Gary Nuttall, managing director at Distlytics, a blockchain
consultancy, hit back at some of the comments in Barclays’
report.
“Fundamentally, I think the [Barclays] paper misses completely
one of the founding purposes of crypto-currency, which is to
provide an ability to make peer-to-peer payments without the need
for an intermediary,” Nuttall, who has an extensive background in
financial services, told this publication.
He continued: “This is where I question the ‘it’s no better than
what exists already’, as all existing platforms use an
intermediary.”
Nuttall addressed each of Barclays’ four main concerns
surrounding crypto-based technology.
Regarding the notion of acceptance and trust issues, he said:
“Yes, that’s fair and it’ll take time for people to become
comfortable with new ways of transacting. However, the mainstream
banking system isn’t particularly well trusted, particularly with
the banking collapse in 2008, the LIBOR rigging scandal, multiple
fines for big banks for sanctions breaches and unethical
behaviour. That’s actually why bitcoin was created, because
of distrust in the existing banking system.”
Nuttall went on to say that while “there is value in appropriate
regulation… sovereignty isn’t necessarily supported by
everybody”, citing Venezuela and Cyprus as examples showing “that
having a government-backed banking [system] and currency isn’t
necessarily a guarantee of security”.
Responding to Barclays’ point about privacy, Nuttall said: “The
paper talks about public, unpermissioned blockchain models, such
as bitcoin, but doesn’t consider other protocols.” He offered
CORDA, developed by the R3 consortium, which counts several large
banks as members, and Ripple, the blockchain-powered payment
system owned by banks, as privately-permissioned
alternatives.
Barclays’ final main issue, irreversibility, “exists already in
properly controlled financial systems whereby financial ledgers
are unalterable and corrections are applied as adjusting
journals, thereby creating an audit trail of changes,” Nuttall
said.
“Is the author [of the paper] suggesting that their own financial
systems are directly modified in a way that doesn’t keep an audit
trail?” he asked.