Technology
Lombard Odier IM Says Breaks New Ground With Blockchain-Powered Bond Deal

The Swiss firm says its blockchain-driven transaction will be the start of more such deals, highlighting how this technology is seen as overturning conventional financial processes.
A team at Lombard
Odier Investment Managers has completed what it says is
its first bond deal using the blockchain technology
commonly associated with controversial digital currencies such as
bitcoin.
The transaction was conducted by the insurance linked strategies
team at the Geneva-headquartered firm. The ILS team bought
catastrophe bonds, which the firm believes is among the first
secondary market transactions completed on blockchain.
(Catastrophe bonds (also known as cat bonds) are risk-linked
securities that transfer a specified set of risks from a sponsor
to investors. They were created and first used in the mid-1990s
after natural disasters such as hurricanes wreaked havoc in the
US.)
A blockchain is a virtual distributed ledger of transactions
shared peer-to-peer that can record ownership across a public
network of computers rendered tamper-proof by advanced
cryptography. The technology is causing a stir as its supporters
believe it could reduce hidden expenses in the financial system
by ousting inefficiencies across areas such as payments,
syndicated loans and equity clearing. Banks, for example, are
using blockchain for a variety of purposes. Late last year, JP
Morgan, Royal Bank of Canada and Australia and New Zealand
Banking Group (ANZ) launched the Interbank Information Network
(IIN), a system that uses blockchain to speed up and simplify
global payments.
Explaining its cat bonds transaction, Lombard Odier said its team
acquired the securities for the LO Insurance Linked Opportunities
Fund via delivery-versus-payment (DVP) settlement from Solidum
Partners, an investment advisory company specialising in
insurance-linked securities. Solidum initially issued the bonds
in August 2017 using a private blockchain to participants on an
invitation-only basis. According to Solidum, the $15 million Dom
Re issuance is the first private catastrophe bond transaction to
be settled this way.
“Using blockchain markedly lowered the transaction costs relative
to other DVP settlement methods where costs are prohibitive for
transactions of this size. The technology mitigated counterparty
risk and accelerated what would have been a partly manual
settlement process, reducing what normally takes a few days to a
matter of seconds. We hope that this blockchain transaction will
be the first of many," Simon Vuille, said.
Blockchain has long been slated as having the inherent ability to
facilitate faster payments because its decentralized make-up
removes the need for third-party authorization by allowing all
participants to simultaneously monitor every stage of a
transaction. No changes can be made without permission from every
participant.