It will only take one broker-dealer to usher in the era of distributed securities settlement, according to Overstockâs blockchain innovation lead.
Once the technological barriers of connecting the platform to a blockchain are crossed and the regulatory climate has been navigated, Johnathan Johnson expects a floodgate of securities professionals looking to cut out pricey middlemen to open.
Overstockâs signature blockchain project, tÃ, announced this week it had signed Keystone Capital Corporation to be that partner, and with the move, it believes itâs one step closer to that new era.
In new statements, Johnson said that while the technological undertaking of Keystone is actually quite minimal, what separates the firm is its willingness to take on those middlemen.
In this light, Johnson said the potential gain to those who cut out some of the financial systemâs most important figures is âhugeâ.
Johnson told CoinDesk:
âI think they want to see that an offering has worked and trades have come through and a digital security has settled. Once thatâs in place, I think if I were a broker dealer Iâd be pretty eager to adopt because it potentially means more business with less cost.â
Johnson breaks down the work of building a blockchain-based settlement platform into three categories. The first, building the product, is âknocking on the door of being done,â he says.
The final two steps, ensuring regulatory compliance and signing up market participants, he contends, will happen simultaneously as the integration is completed.
Technologically speaking, tÃâs settlement platform is designed to be blockchain agnostic, but today itâs unconventional in that it uses the bitcoin blockchain for additional security.
But maybe more importantly, the platform is also set up so that most of this technological heavy-lifting (and understanding) is done by the software, not the broker.
Other than the time it takes to plug into the tà system, Johnson says a broker-dealerâs most demanding technological tasks are generating digital wallets to hold the cyrypto-securities and signing the transactions.
What distinguishes Keystone, according to Johnson, isnât that the San Diego-based firm is much more technologically astute that its competitors. Rather, it is willing to work with regulators during the ongoing ârigorous regulatory review.â
âOne of the reasons this isnât happening as quickly as it otherwise might is because regulators want to make sure itâs done right,â said Johnson. âKeystone is willing to work with them.â
Johnson added:
âPlowing fields that have already been plowed is so much easier than plowing a field thatâs got a bunch of rocks.â
TÃâs parent company Overstock.com has a long, confrontational, history with much of how Wall Street does business.
In a statement yesterday, Overstockâs CEO, Patrick Byrne, went so far as to describe tà as âworking on a blockchain version of Wall Street.â
As part of that effort, Keystoneâs integration with the tà settlement platform is aimed at the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation, or DTCC â the US post-trade financial services company that last year processed $1.5qn in securities.
While the DTCC lists the majority of settlement times after those securities are moved at three days â or T+3, tà wants to settle instantly, hence its name.
Johnson said that stock issuers and broker-dealers stand to benefit the most from saved fees and faster transactions on a blockchain-based post-trade infrastructure, leaving traditional infrastructure providers like the DTCC to work on their own blockchain solutions.
Johnson said:
âTheyâre basically a middleman that camps out in the middle that goes away when you can trade on blockchain and trade plus zero, when the trade becomes the settlement. Thatâs one of the greatest benefits of blockchain is removing middlemen that extract from inefficiencies.â
Floodgates image via Shutterstock