2015 has seen no shortage of major financial institutions jumping onboard the blockchain bandwagon â in the last two months alone, more than 22 banks have announced pilot projects focused on the emerging technology.
One of the earliest and most vocal financial institutions in the fray, however, was US stock exchange Nasdaq, which revealed in May it had been working for a year to harness bitcoinâs distributed ledger for private stock sales.
Whether the bitcoin blockchain will emerge as the one ledger to rule them all, a predecessor to more refined, enterprise-grade technologies or one blockchain among many, remains to be seen, but Nasdaq suggests it is equally interested in any of these possible futures.
In an exclusive interview, Fredrik Voss, vice president and head of blockchain strategy at Nasdaq, spoke to CoinDesk about his organizationâs strategy for communicating its thesis on the technology to those just delving into similar research.
Voss told CoinDesk:
âYou get confusion around bitcoin and blockchain, there is an increased understanding that there are two innovations, the asset and the technology innovation.â
Appointed in June, Voss previously served as the companyâs deputy head of commodities, but admits he was a ânewcomerâ to the technology before assuming the position.
Voss presented a clear roadmap for Nasdaqâs development, adding candidly that the company is not âmarriedâ to the bitcoin blockchain, but is rather âledger agnosticâ in its approach, believing bitcoin remains the best ledger system for its current needs.
Still, itâs the underlying technology that Voss believes holds âgreat potentialâ to solve pain points in the operation of financial markets due to attributes such as its auditability and security.
âThat is what attracted me and attracted Nasdaq, and the potential of creating efficiencies and releasing capital that is locked into post-trade processes. Those are powerful and attractive attributes,â Voss said, adding:
âNow of course it remains to be proved that those things can be deliver.â
The comments comes as part of a wider interview that finds the firm opening up about its stance on bitcoin, touching on topics such as the role of blockchains in settlement and how its work fits into the broader explorations being conducted by major banks.
Voss described Nasdaqâs blockchain operations as informal yet expansive in scope.
For example, he declined to disclose how many full-time team members the company had working on the technology, but suggested the number of those working on such projects âonce a week or once a dayâ is above 25.
Nasdaqâs blockchain group, he said, is divided into technologists; those performing supporting functions such as communication, information security and legal work; and its business unit, which defines the use cases on which it experiments.
âCurrently, it is really a combination of informing, inspiring and encouraging the organization and the unit to see where the opportunities are with this technology,â Voss explained. âItâs not that weâve set aside money and resources and we sit in a room and think big thoughts, weâre leveraging the entire organization and using the organization as it is.â
Certain departments, he hinted, are looking at proofs of concept and prototypes, though he declined to reveal details about unannounced projects.
Voss also weighed in with his view on the more theoretical arguments ongoing in the space, elaborating on his view of how asset management should ideally function on a blockchain.
For example, in its Nasdaq Private Market, private shares are issued via colored coins, a process by which the metadata of a bitcoin can be augmented to represent a real-world asset. Up for debate is how beneficial this advent is when more advanced blockchains using smart contracts can move data sophisticated enough to serve as the asset itself.
Voss, however, dismissed this concern as academic, arguing that while this outcome may be desirable in the long term, more simplistic uses of blockchain technology still offer advantages over todayâs best practices.
âYou have electronic representations of paper-based certificates and you have electronic representations of physical assets in other markets. The attractive attributes of a distributed ledger is the settlement immediacy of even those tokens,â he said.
Voss argued that todayâs technology lacks the ability to achieve âimmediate settlementâ.
âThen thereâs the distribution and the efficiency you can have when not having to replicate the same transaction over and over and over again, and you can have the 24/7 aspect, youâre operating around the clock which in most markets is difficult to achieve,â he continued.
Looking out, he acknowledged having assets directly embedded into the blockchain would be more beneficial, but suggested Nasdaq still believes the technology is attractive today.
Voss further provided clarity to Nasdaqâs work and how it fits into the large experimentations being conducted by major financial institutions.
Addressing distributed ledger startup R3 CEV and its acquisition of 22 major banking partners, Voss said he was encouraged âmore sources and more brainsâ are entering the space, even if he doesnât envision major stock exchanges striking a similar alliance.
âWe think it will increase the pace of work in the field, but I think itâs too early to talk about bank-chains or exchange-chains, it feels too much like early days,â Voss stated.
Voss suggested he would be happy to share findings with major banks, but suggested its emphasis would be on matters relevant to its business. This included making its clearing and depositories more efficient and improving the technology it licenses to partners.
âWe have a market technology business where we provide settlement solutions to others around the world, and for us to add distributed ledger systems to those systems adds value for those clients,â he said.
Voss was less open about the ongoing work being conducted by partner and portfolio startup Chain to develop its new blockchain-based Nasdaq Private Market.
However, he emphasized that the project is on schedule and that it continues to meet internal benchmarks, even as similar products are also set for launch by companies including Digital Asset Holdings and Symbiont, among others.
âWhat I can say is we make public what we make public,â he said. âWeâve set up a number of milestones internally, weâre hitting those milestones and proof of concepts and putting out releases of user interfaces and testing those.â
Should this positive progress continue, Voss suggested Nasdaq could launch its Private Market product before the yearâs end.
Fredrik Voss image via Nasdaq