Northern Trust revealed today it has been discreetly running what may be the worldâs first functioning private equities blockchain.
Custom built for Switzerland-based management firm Unigestion, the platform was co-developed by Northern Trust and IBM using Hyperledgerâs Fabric code base. Notably, the distributed ledger features an active node that is already providing real-time data to a European regulator.
However, the increased transparency and speed are just part of the reason why the bank with $6.7tn assets under custody decided to build the platform.
According to bank president Peter Cherecwich, the most significant business advantage the blockchain solution offers its clients is an accelerated time to market for a new crop of high-tech private equities funds.
The president of Northern Trustâs corporate and institutional services, Cherecwich called the shorter time to market a âhuge advantageâ for customers.
Cherecwich said:
âThe biggest benefit for the clients, and for the ultimate investor, is this whole process will make the time to market for a new fund much faster. Those dollars that are today sitting on the sidelines waiting to be invested will be invested a lot quicker.â
According to the parties involved, development on the blockchain implementation started last year when Northern Trust contacted IBM to explore how the technology might simplify private equity, a known pain point with relatively few, but highly complicated transactions.
Instead of high-frequency transactions that have tested blockchainâs ability to scale, the private equities industry, worth an estimated $4tn, consists of large investments from a few parties over long periods of time.
âItâs labor intensive,â said Cherecwich. âAnd it really seemed like this would be a very good problem to solve with this new technology.â
While both IBM and Northern Trust have previously announced proofs-of-concept, todayâs announcement of a functioning blockchain is a first of its kind.
Specifically, counterparties in Unigestionâs blockchain-based private equities fund will each power their own node, including investment managers, general partners, limited partners, fund administrators, auditors and regulators.
The regulatory node itself is being overseen by the UK-based Guernsey Financial Services Commission, which regulates 2,000 licensees from the banking sector and other financial services around Europe.
Though nodes run by regulators will have broad access to the data, it will be the same type of information they already have, but on a real-time basis.
âIf youâre a part of the Guernsey Financial Services Commission, your membership will allow you to see more of the ledger because youâve been granted permission,â IBM fellow and vice president of blockchain technology Jerry Cuomo told CoinDesk.
Access to those regulatory nodes and other nodes on the network is secured via IBMâs hardware security modules (HSM), offered as part the companyâs high security business network custom-built for blockchain users.
âWe run this ultra high-security blockchain network by taking the Hyperledger Fabric and melding it into this ultra-secure environment,â Cuomo said, adding:
âIt doesnât only leave cookie crumbs if your keys have been tampered with, actually, the hardware implodes on itself.â
With only a single client at the time of launch, Cherecwich tells CoinDesk transaction volume on the blockchain so far has been âobviously smallâ.
However, the aim is to create more complex products in the future, and to attract new clients with the quicker time to launch, helping its customers both make and save money.
Traditionally, changes to a private equity fund might be initiated by the administratorâs lawyer, who then contacts each participating fundâs lawyer, a process that can involve between 10 and 30 individuals, said IBM partner and blockchain vice president, Kevin Pleiter.
On average, Pleiter estimates a change to a private equity can take as long as six months, and account for 10% of total value put into a fund.
âToday, the way the private equity market works is the lawyers sit in the middle,â Pleiter told CoinDesk.
âThey become the trust of the parties. What blockchain has done is said, we donât need to transact through people.â
But additional participants will likely be waiting at least a few more months before being admitted to the blockchain.
According to Cherecwich, his company is conservative at its core, in spite of the push into blockchain solutions, and as such, its planned growth trajectory is equally reserved.
Cherecwich points to the bankâs minimal headlines leading up to todayâs announcement as evidence of a discreet strategy.
He said heâs in no rush to add the second and third clients to the service, calling the process for choosing new users âselectiveâ in a statement.
Prior to adding additional clients he says the bank intends to spend the next two or three months collecting data on what works and what doesnât.
Cherecwich concluded:
âLike my mom told me, one step at at time. Letâs launch this, and make sure the clientâs happy.â
Dollar puzzle; Northern Trust image via Shutterstock