Technology
Schroders Makes Big Digital Assets Play
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Digital assets continue to attract wealth management attention and from large organisations, notwithstanding sharp price volatility.
Schroders, the
UK-listed wealth manager, has taken a “strategic minority stake”
in Forteus, an asset
manager focused on blockchain technology and digital
assets.
Forteus is the asset management arm of the Numeus Group, a
diversified digital asset investment firm. The Numeus business is
led by Nobel Gulati, who is the former CEO of Two Sigma Advisers.
It was founded by a team of finance, blockchain and technology
professionals.
The move by Schroders to invest in such a business indicates how
digital assets – a term covering a wide field such as bitcoin,
tokens and smart contracts – continues to attract wealth
management attention. This has continued despite dramatic market
shifts, such as falls in bitcoin prices or the collapse of some
so-called “stablecoins.” Large financial institutions such
as JP Morgan, Julius Baer and Guggenheim Partners, among others,
have pushed resources into the space. (See here for
an overview of developments and the issues at stake.)
“Schroders has chosen to invest in a leading-edge specialist in
blockchain technology and digital assets in order to support its
ongoing education and research in this sector and to develop
investment solutions for the benefit of its clients,” Schroders
said in its statement yesterday.
Forteus will offer a range of investment solutions which span
customised portfolios of external managers, yield generation,
actively managed thematic portfolios and, over the long term,
tokenization. Once available, Schroders will give clients access
to Forteus capabilities where appropriate, Schroders
said.
“Blockchain will be a catalyst for fundamental change within
asset management, financial services at large, and many other
industries more broadly. It not only has the potential to
transform the efficiency of existing solutions but will drive the
democratisation of private assets; it represents a new frontier
of technological and financial innovation,” Peter Harrison, group
chief executive, Schroders said.
Gideon Berger, former co-chief investment officer of Blackstone
Alternative Asset Management, is Forteus non-executive chairman.
The business, which is based in Switzerland’s “crypto valley” of
Zug, has an office in New York.
The volatility of some digital assets has created controversy and pushback from some in the investment world. For example, PGIM, a $1.4 trillion investment arm of US-listed Prudential Financial, said in May this year that cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin are a “poor choice” for long-term investors and make portfolios riskier and more volatile.
The business fired a salvo at cryptos in the wake of the collapse
in price of so-called “stablecoins.” (These are
cryptocurrencies which attempt to peg market value to some
external reference – for example, fiat currency such as the
dollar. Other stablecoins use algorithms or different methods to
keep their values from fluctuating too much.) Two main
stablecoins from the crypto project Terra have collapsed with
some calling the incident a Ponzi scheme. Terra dollar sister
token Luna has fallen dramatically. UST lost its dollar peg when
millions of investors sought to cash in on their tokens at the
same time. Investors learned that the UST reserve mechanism was
flawed – UST is an algorithmic stablecoin, backed by its sister
asset Luna.
Even so, as this news service knows, there is still considerable
interest among financial industry practitioners in
cryptocurrencies and the underlying blockchain technology.