Skepticism dominated a Tuesday hearing on cryptocurrencies and blockchain at the U.K. parliament, but it was not the members of parliament (MPs) who set the negative tone.
Rather, it was interbank payments startup Ripple and the XRP cryptocurrency that came under fire as Martin Walker, director of the non-profit Centre for Evidence Based Management and a former product developer at blockchain consortium R3, claimed that the technologies are unlikely to solve inefficiencies in the financial sector, specifically criticizing Rippleâs current products.
Defending Rippleâs record was director of regulatory relations Ryan Zagone. Dr. Grammateia Kotsialou, a postdoctoral researcher at Kingâs College London and Chris Taylor, chief operating officer at asset tracking blockchain startup Everledger, filled out the panel, which answered questions from the British Parliamentâs Treasury Select Committee.
During his testimony, Zagone cited the ability to track money transfers as a core benefit of the companyâs technology. However, Walker argued that the companyâs model offers little more than the existing SWIFT messaging system, saying âthe hard thing about tracking payments is actually getting the people involved in the payments to actually upload the status.â
âSo simply having a blockchain doesnât actually get people to update the status of where the payment is,â he continued.
Likewise, he criticized Ripple pilot projects that propose to use XRP as a means of bridging two currencies in an international transaction â a role that the U.S. dollar commonly occupies.
âYou have the concept of a crossing currency to deal with that scenario where thereâs a lack of liquidity,â Walker explained, remarking further:
âYou need someone to provide the liquidity to be able to change into and out of Ripple. And holding Ripple, a currency which has seen its price drop 80 percent and then back up 100 percent in the course of the last two months is just not credible. So, putting cryptocurrencies into the financial sector is a huge source of risk.â
The ministers at the hearing also turned their attention to Ripple, specifically expressing confusion regarding XRPâs relationship to Ripple Labs.
MP Stewart Hosie commented that âif people buy XRP, a financial asset from Ripple Laboratories, it doesnât entitle them to an ownership stake, thereâs no right to be converted back into conventional currencies, and it doesnât pay any return. It also seemingly has no purpose.â
However, Zagone pushed back against this statement, saying âthatâs a common misperception.â
He told the panel:
âXRP is open source and it was not created by our company, so that existed as an open source technology. We created a company that was interested in modernizing payments and then began using that open-source tech to do so ⦠We didnât create XRP ⦠What we do have is we do own a significant amount of XRP, it was gifted to us by some of the open-source developers that created it. But thereâs not a direct connection between Ripple the company and XRP.â
Asked whether XRP was designed to avoid regulations, Zagone reiterated his statements from earlier in the hearing that Ripple only sells XRP to institutional investors and not retail consumers, and likewise that the company merely makes use of XRP, but is not directly connected to it.
With the conclusion of the hearing, Walker advised the Committee to think critically about blockchain technology and cryptocurrencies, concluding
âI would just urge the committee that we do not repeat the mistakes that have been made over and again of getting blinded by the word innovation, particularly relating to financial products.â
The full hearing is now available online.
UPDATE: This article has been updated to indicate Walker was previously employed by R3.
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