Mass media company Thomson Reuters has found that one in five of its financial services clients is considering trading cryptocurrencies this year.
The firm recently surveyed more than 400 clients on its data and trading platforms, including Eikon, REDI, FXall and Elektron. About 20 percent of these clients were âreally interested and actively exploringâ launching cryptocurrency trading operations in 2018, the firmâs director of new content initiatives Sam Chadwick told CoinDesk.
Chadwick added:
âThe feedback really astonished us a bit.â
According to a press statement, 70 percent of the firms looking into trading plan to begin in three to six months, while another 22 percent aim to start in six to 12 months.
âThis is a major change from a year ago,â Neill Penney, Thomson Reutersâ co-head of trading, said in the statement.
Chadwick emphasized the shift in attitudes, telling CoinDesk that a year ago, âas we were engaging customers, none of them had any particular interest in cryptocurrencies.â Clients were instead interested in âthe blockchain side of things, smart contracts.â
Interest has since notably shifted towards cryptocurrencies. For example, within Eikonâs foreign exchange category, traffic to the landing page for cryptocurrencies comes second only to the euro, Chadwick said. Thomson Reuters has also supplemented its bitcoin price feed with data for ether, litecoin, bitcoin cash and Rippleâs XRP, as well as bitcoin futures prices and indices from CryptoCompare.
Chadwick says that this rapid expansion beyond bitcoin brings up âthe interesting question about altcoins, and how diverse do we go here?â
Some survey respondents said, âweâll trade anything,â he continued. However, in general, interest concentrated around those coins with larger market valuations. A small number further expressed interest in trading ICO tokens, but âprivacy coinsâ such as zcash and monero had few takers. And a few said they were amenable to trading cryptocurrencies, but only through ETFs or similar instruments.
Chadwick would not name the clients that had expressed interest in cryptocurrency trading, but he said they included large asset managers, hedge funds and âsome of the trading desks at some of the largest banks.â
Speculating as to why financial institutions are suddenly interested in cryptocurrency trading, Chadwick said there was âobviouslyâ some correlation with cryptocurrenciesâ prices. He added, though, that traditional financial players might be interested in gaining experience with tokenized assets in general, since they anticipate a wave of new instruments such as crypto bonds, blockchain-based equity and tokenized dividends.
âWe could start seeing some really, really clever stuff,â he said, adding:
âIf these organizations have no competence to trade crypto assets at all, theyâll be locked out of a broad segment.â
Chart image via Shutterstock.