Two London-based start-ups have joined forces on a platform to process currency trades with blockchain technology, in an effort to cut settlement times and costs in the $5 trillion-a-day global foreign exchange market. Cobalt DL, fronted by former Citi and Deutsche Bank currencies supremo Andy Coyne and backed by 15 major foreign exchange market participants, is partnering with fellow London-based firm SETL, which says it can settle transactions via the blockchain almost instantly.
Blockchain, which originated in the digital currency bitcoin, works as a web-based transaction-processing and settlement system. It creates a "golden record" of any given set of data that is automatically replicated for all parties in a secure network, eliminating any need for third-party verification. In contrast, the current foreign exchange market requires multiple records to be created for buyer, seller, broker, clearer and third parties in currency trades, and then reconciliation across multiple systems. "Today, everyone records their own version of the trade and sends each other messages, confirmations, and everyone records their own version - this is the shared version, which every participant in a trade has access to from their own perspective," Coyne told Reuters. "They key here is you can't get it wrong, because you're looking at the same thing." Coyne said the system, which is due to be available as a commercial product by the end of 2017, could save market players as much as 80 percent on market infrastructure costs, including messaging, matching, trade reporting, reconciliation and other back- and middle-office processes.
Comments
Comments are closed.