Cryptocurrencies could one day help investors diversify their equity and bond portfolios, analysts for JPMorgan Chase wrote in a new, 71-page research report focused on the tech.
The report, entitled âDecrypting Cryptocurrencies: Technology, Applications and Challengesâ and dated Feb. 9, was drafted by the bankâs Global Research unit. A copy obtained by CoinDesk explores a range of subjects related to cryptocurrency and blockchain, notably exploring the implications for investors, financial firms and central banks, among others.
Perhaps the most notable part of the report is that it â albeit cautiously â predicts that cryptocurrencies might one day play a role in the diversification of global bond and equity portfolios. The report states:
âIf past returns, volatilities and correlations persist, [cryptocurrencies] could potentially have a role in diversifying oneâs global bond and equity portfolio. But in our view, that is a big if given the astronomic returns and volatilities of the past few years.â
âIf [cryptocurrencies] survive the next few years and remain part of the global market, then they will likely have exited their current speculative phase and would then have more normal returns, volatilities (both much lower) and correlations (more like that of other zero-return assets such as gold and JPY),â the authors continue.
That sentiment perhaps stands in contrast with comments from the bankâs chairman, president and CEO, Jamie Dimon, who last year issued his now-infamous remark that bitcoin is a âfraud.â As posited by the reportâs authors, cryptocurrencies are âunlikely to disappear completely.â
â[Cryptocurrencies] are unlikely to disappear completely and could easily survive in varying forms and shapes among players who desire greater decentralization, peer-to-peer networks and anonymity, even as the latter is under threat,â they wrote.
Looking past the investment picture, the bankâs report looks at the wider question of blockchain use, particularly by private firms who would maintain their own gated or âpermissionedâ blockchains.
The authors write that blockchain is a âsuperior database,â and that despite concerns from regulators, the tech itself is potentially âregulation friendly.â
âIn our view, the biggest appeal of blockchain will be in the ability to deliver efficiency gains across the value chain,â the report states, going on to explain:
âThe proposed uses a distributed ledger in the financial sector are likely to be based on known participants defined in advance, with appropriate KYC/AML documentation with tightly authorized access. Consequently, we believe that distributed ledger technology has the potential to offer regulators greater degrees of transparency, higher levels of resiliency and shorter settlement times, reducing counterparty and market risk.â
Likewise, the authors argued that blockchain has the potential to disrupt âcross-border payments, settlement/clearing/collateral management as well as the broader world of TMT, transportation and healthcare.â That said, the report cautions that any benefits would be seen âonly where any cost efficiencies offset regulatory, technical and security hurdlesâ to implementing the technology.
The report also touches on the topic of a so-called âFedcoin,â or a kind of cryptocurrency (or digital currency) created by a central bank.
And while Fed officials themselves have largely said âno time soonâ to the idea (in contrast with other central banks who are actively investigating applications), JPMorganâs report digs into the possible implications â and ramifications â of such an issuance.
The reportâs authors make the case that, in one sense, a Fedcoin would be supportive of a âcentral bank-provided payment servicesâ within a cashless system, and that this could help banks implement negative interest rates, which some economists endorse.
However, they also point out that the issuance of such a currency âwould give non-banks access to the Fed balance sheet,â which could in turn âendanger the economically and socially important financial intermediation function of commercial banks.â
Likewise, the authors claimed that a state-issued cryptocurrency could impact the extension of credit to the private sector because it would undermine fractional reserve banking, writing:
âIf cryptocurrencies were seen as superior to bank deposits, prompting a wholesale shift into cryptocurrencies, then a much larger share of savings would go to the central bankâs assets (government debt) and less to commercial banks loans, thus potentially dramatically increasing private credit risk premia and reducing the flow of credit to the private sector.â
The report also grapples with the problem of anonymity for a state-issued cryptocurrency.
âOn the one hand, privacy has come to be seen as an implicit constitutional right, and that may extend to monetary transactions,â the authors note. âOn the other hand, there are several laws on the books intended to prevent the financial system from being used to launder money or finance terrorism and other activities.â
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