Technology
Crypto Assets, Distributed Finance And Wealth Managers' Menus
Family offices, private banks and wealth managers are considering using the infrastructure of digital assets to run their businesses, or investing in them to make money.
It is hard to avoid the world of cryptocurrencies and other
digital assets today. The air is abuzz with talk about bitcoin,
smart contracts, non-fungible tokens, tokenisation and
decentralised finance. And wealth management as an industry, and
as a guardian of client wealth, is being affected by all of these
areas in a variety of ways.
Family offices, private banks and wealth managers are considering
using the infrastructure of digital assets to run their
businesses, or investing in them to make money. Turmoil in
established monetary systems – most dramatically with Western
powers’
removal of Russia from the SWIFT banking network – puts
alternative financial systems under a new, not always
comfortable, spotlight. A focus on know-your-client (KYC)
background checks and a need for greater compliance rigour, means
that the audit trail which peer-to-peer networks are supposed to
have has considerable potential. Beyond all this, there’s
the hoped-for speed and efficiency of P2P platforms such as
blockchain in a world where back-office reconciliation and
settlement can still take days.
A nagging question, however, is whether some of these new tech
areas are “solutions in search of a problem". Other matters
often hinge on how liberal or restrictive national regulators
are. Switzerland and Singapore, both important wealth hubs,
appear on the more open side, while the UK and the US are
somewhere in the middle, and mainland China appears highly
restrictive, banning the “mining” of bitcoin. (China went from
controlling up to two-thirds of all bitcoin mining in the world
in April to not contributing to the industry at all as of July
2021, according to data compiled by the University of Cambridge's
Centre for Alternative Finance.)
Overall, however, the tone is one of enthusiasm, tempered with a
few question marks.
“In the last six months there has been increasing [wealth
industry] interest in cryptos. For example people ask about NFTs,
tokenisation and how they can offer digital assets to clients,”
Dr Nils Bulling, head of strategic innovation and ecosystem at
Avaloq, told this
publication. Dr Bulling said conversations about the impact of
this category of tech started about three or four years
ago.
There is little doubt that the wealth sector is showing lots of
interest in the space. A survey of family offices around the
world by BNY
Mellon Wealth Management, published last week, found that 77
per cent of them have some interest or involvement in
cryptocurrencies. Knight Frank, in its
annual wealth report, also published last week, noted that 60 per
cent of respondents to its survey cited blockchain technology as
an increasing opportunity. It found that clients ask for 1 to 5
per cent of their portfolios to be in cryptos. The report’s
authors noted that “we are seeing a shift within the banking
industry to accepting and managing crypto assets, allowing them
to be used as collateral and converting crypto into fiat. It is
not a widely marketed service, but banks recognise that the
younger generation is going to be using crypto as a
currency.”
And there, perhaps, is the key to wealth managers’ thinking.
Whatever the scepticism may be among ageing Boomers and some of
the Gen X client cohorts, firms need to attract younger clients
who appear to accept these new technologies as normal and even
exciting. To stay relevant, cryptos have to be on the menu.
Asia and others
It is arguable that one way in which Asia is now setting the pace
for innovation – once held by Silicon Valley – is in
cryptos. A study by KPMG
said that investment in the cryptocurrency and blockchain sector
in Singapore jumped more than 10 times in 2021 to a record, with
82 deals worth a combined $1.48 billion, rising from $110 million
in 2020 (source: Bloomberg, 7 February, 2022). In
Switzerland, the “crypto valley” of Zug is a European powerhouse,
as the author was reminded during last week’s visit to Zurich for
the annual WealthBriefing External Asset Management
awards event.
There were about 1,128 blockchain companies in Switzerland and the neighbouring principality of Liechtenstein at the end of last year (up by 18 per cent (source: swissinfo.ch). The Swiss government implemented the legal basis for distributed ledger technology in 2021 and for listing security tokens on regulated secondary markets. The report said that more than half of the Swiss banks apparently plan to offer digital assets services over the next few years. To take just one example of what is going on, in late February, Swiss digital assets platform SEBA Bank secured a regulatory green light from Abu Dhabi. This also highlights how Gulf jurisdictions, seeking to remain relevant beyond hydrocarbons, are getting into the act.
In the UK, as the country’s financial sector seeks new fields to conquer after Brexit, digital assets are an important part of a wider fintech story. TheCityUK – the umbrella body speaking for much of the London financial sector – said that around 9.8 million people in the UK, equivalent to 19 per cent of the population, owned crypto assets in 2021.
Turning to the US, the market size is expected to grow from $1.6
billion in 2021 to $2.2 billion by 2026, at a compound annual
growth rate of 7.1 per cent. It is certainly a good way for
California’s Silicon Valley, and other tech clusters such as
Boston or Austin to stay on the front foot.
The digital assets space is becoming more mainstream. A 2021
Goldman Sachs
survey found that nearly half the family offices it conducts
business with want to add digital currencies to their stable of
investments, with the closely held firms seeing crypto as a
possible hedge for higher inflation and prolonged low interest
rates. Almost half of respondents to
that Goldman Sachs report said that they are thinking of
moving into digital assets such as bitcoin, although most are not
currently in this space. Their main reason for caution is that
they are sceptical of whether cryptocurrencies are a store of
value. (Goldman Sachs polled more than 150 family offices.)
Major institutions, including JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley, Julius
Baer, Guggenheim Partners, and others, are involved. SC Ventures,
Standard Chartered’s innovation and ventures unit,
partnered with Northern Trust to launch Zodia, a
cryptocurrency custodian for institutional investors, which was
registered with the UK's Financial Conduct Authority in July last
year.
Terms
Let’s nail down some terms, such as non-fungible tokens (NFTs).
Unlike cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin, which are identical
units that can be exchanged and are therefore fungible, NFTs are
not interchangeable. Each NFT is a unique token on a blockchain
which stores information about provenance that can be traced back
to the original issuer; therefore it provides collectors with the
opportunity of building a digital collection. For this reason,
NFTs are popular in applications which require unique digital
items, including crypto art, digital collectables and online
gaming, where some guarantee of authenticity and ownership
history adds value.
The trading volume of NFTs surpassed $13 billion last year,
compared with $33 million in 2020 (Source: The Block Research).
NFTs are proving a hit with younger wealthy individuals, a fact
not lost on art galleries and creators. Arguably, where NFTs grab
the interest of investors and commentators most is in the form of
crypto art. A recent example includes musician Grimes selling $6
million worth of digital artworks via auction on Nifty Gateway, a
marketplace which allows users to buy, sell, display and create a
collection of "Nifties." One short video, ‘Death of the Old’
sold for nearly $390,000. However, most of the $6 million in
sales came from two pieces – "Earth" and "Mars" – with almost 700
copies being sold.
A famous NFT sale was that of Beeple’s “First 5000 Days” artwork
for £50 million at the first digital-only art auction by
Christie’s in March 2021. Following the sale, Beeple is now
one of most valuable living artists and has taken NFTs from a
niche area of the crypto world, to a mainstream phenomenon.
The term “DEFI” applies to distributed finance. DEFI uses
emerging technology to remove third parties in financial
transactions. Components to remember are stablecoins, software,
and hardware that enable the development of applications.
“Smart contracts” are self-executing contracts with the terms of
the agreement between buyer and seller being directly written
into lines of code. The code and the agreements exist across the
blockchain network. The code controls the execution, and
transactions are trackable and irreversible. Another term used a
great deal is “tokenization.” Crypto tokens are a type of
cryptocurrency that represents an asset, such as a private equity
investment, or publicly listed stock in a company. Tokens can be
used for investment purposes, to store value, or to make
purchases.
Tokenization is often spoken about in the alternative assets
space as a way to widen access to investors who aren’t
ultra-wealthy or large institutions. Tokenization is an important
trend and comes in two main forms – tokenization of established
assets such as private equity or venture capital, and for
“non-bankable assets” such as fine art, Avaloq’s Dr Bulling said.
“Generally, banks talk about it but haven’t yet offered it
[tokenization] but it might move in the next two or three years,”
he said.
David Genn, CEO of Goji,
a UK-based technology platform for private asset investments,
said that tokenized assets “promise the ability for investors to
access private assets more efficiently and in smaller fractions
than they currently can. The underlying assets remain the same
and regulators treat both the tokenized and standard versions of
the asset in the same way.”
“The goal for managers and technology providers is to increase
the efficiency of access to private assets for investors. This
can be readily done without the need to tokenize the assets which
introduces significant additional complexity,” he said.
Current events also give the case for alternative financial
structures new edge, Charlie Morris, founder of Byte Tree, said. (The firm
provides digital asset data, fundamentals, technicals and crypto
research and analysis.)
“Bitcoin sits at the heart of exchanging value between machines,
and I am certain that machines will exchange substantially more
value ten years from now than they do today. Things are
definitely looking up for bitcoin – governments are keen to
embrace central bank digital currencies, not just in China, but
seemingly everywhere,” he said. “Some for good, and others for
bad. Both Russia and Ukraine are contemplating an increasing role
for bitcoin in the official payments sector for completely
different reasons. Russia wants to work around sanctions, whereas
Ukraine wants to liberate its citizens. These should not be
disregarded as isolated cases, because the world is becoming a
more complex place. Even in Canada, where the truck drivers are
expressing their legitimate right to protest, they are being
denied access to the banking system. This demonstrates that
law-abiding people should protect themselves from involuntary
state sanctions,” Morris added.
A question remains about trust – that precious quality in
finance. And to that end, an important priority for banks and
wealth managers of all kinds is being able to safely store,
exchange and validate the crypto assets they own or seek to
acquire. That is going to require not just infrastructure, but
clearly defined and enforced rules.
(Editor's note: We continue to track how the crypto world influences wealth mangement, both as a business and what clients invest in, and are grateful for insights. Email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com)