Having a window into the future would make the job of an insurer a whole lot easier â and blockchain could make that possibility a bit more realistic.
The topic of blockchain-powered prediction markets and how the tech could help insurers like MetLife and reinsurers like Swiss Re was on display during CoinDeskâs Consensus 2017 blockchain conference.
Swiss Re, for its part, is in the earliest stages of seeing how it can tap the âwisdom of the crowdsâ to help make the reinsurer operate more effectively.
Jags Rao, who serves as the Switzerland-based firmâs blockchain workstream lead, conceded that such an application isnât going to happen in the short term â but that doesnât mean itâs not on the firmâs radar.
He said during the panel:
âItâs not in the next couple of years horizon, but itâs important to be prepared because thatâs where we as an insurance company can contribute knowledge that can help make that work.â
The idea of using prediction markets that let experts wager on future events based on their certainty of its outcome is also being explored blockchain startup Gem, which has partnered with healthcare tech firm Philips to research the potential benefits of blockchain for healthcare.
Siva Kannan, the companyâs VP of engineering, said that his team is also in the early stage of looking at the prediction market concept.
According to Kannan, if his company were to ever consider using data derived from a blockchain-based prediction market in a healthcare application, heâd be unlikely to do so with any organization funded by a token that didnât also play an active role in the functionality of the app itself.
âWe havenât explored it a lot,â he said. âWe are definitely looking at the opportunities.â
Not everyone was onboard with the concept â at least for now, including the membership of distributed ledger consortium R3, which was represented by director Ryan Rugg.
Subhajit Mandal, MetLifeâs director of fintech innovation, also said his company wasnât currently looking into prediction markets.
Their reasoning: because those markets are generally reliant on publicly available information, and his firmâs focus on life insurance means that the requisite data is tightly controlled.
Mandal said:
âWhen it comes to personal health, that data will not be available.â
Disclosure:Â CoinDesk is a subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, which has an ownership stake in Gem.Â
Image by Michael del Castillo for CoinDesk