About a-team Marketing Services
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry
The knowledge platform for the financial technology industry

A-Team Insight Blogs

Blockchain Could Shorten Settlement Time, Paxos Exec Says

Subscribe to our newsletter

Another frontier for application of blockchain distributed ledger technology could be shortening the settlement cycle for trades, says an executive at Paxos, the blockchain technology company that completed a pilot program with Euroclear in December for gold transaction settlement.

Paxos is planning to roll out its gold transaction settlement capabilities more widely in 2017, building on its Euroclear Bankchain effort, according to Rajesh Nair, vice president of engineering at Paxos. More broadly, blockchain can disrupt middle and back office functions, not just front-office and trading functions, adds Nair.

“T+3 [trade date plus three] settlement means you’re locking up all the capital for three days,” he says. “When you do instantaneous settlement, you unlock all that capital. … The fact that we still need three days to settle a trade is just not sustainable as a processing constant. We’re striving for near real-time settlement. If we’re highly successful at what we’re trying to do, then as a first a trade and the settlement will be the same day. The endgame is to say the trade and settlement are the same thing.”

By creating a delivery-versus-payment transaction and record that is agreed upon by both parties to a transaction, reconciliations become unnecessary, explains Nair. “Blockchain enables you to skip reconciliations, because you have a copy of that same database that everybody has,” he says. “So there are no reconciliation costs. Blockchain itself reconciles everything. That has the potential to reduce a whole slew of costs from the back office.”

Paxos’ Bankchain service is built to be interoperable through APIs or FIX and Swift connections. Paxos has a market advisory group in which users (including some Tier 1 firms) provide feedback on its services. “They can advise us what’s wrong with it and see how it integrates with existing systems,” says Nair. “We use the feedback to refine the product.”

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Upcoming Webinar: Are Your Legacy Voice Recordings a Compliance Time Bomb?

2 July 2025 10:00am ET | 3:00pm London | 4:00pm CET Duration: 50 Minutes Recent enforcement actions underscore the importance of maintaining accurate, secure and up-to-date voice and electronic communication. For some organisations, legacy voice recording systems are not at or beyond end-of-life, posing significant compliance, operational and financial risks. These outdated systems often fail...

BLOG

DG FISMA Rejects the ESAs’ Draft RTS for DORA

Less than one week after the Digital Operations Resilience Act (DORA) came into full force in the EU, the Directorate-General for Financial Stability, Financial Services and Capital Markets Union (DG FISMA) issued a letter to the Chair of the Joint Committee of the European Supervisory Authorities (ESAs) rejecting the draft regulatory technical standards (RTS) submitted...

EVENT

Data Licensing Forum 2025

The Data Licensing Forum will explore industry trends, themes and specific developments relating to licensing of financial market data from Exchanges and Data Vendors.

GUIDE

AI in Capital Markets: Practical Insight for a Transforming Industry – Free Handbook

AI is no longer on the horizon – it’s embedded in the infrastructure of modern capital markets. But separating real impact from inflated promises requires a grounded, practical understanding. The AI in Capital Markets Handbook 2025 provides exactly that. Designed for data-driven professionals across the trade life-cycle, compliance, infrastructure, and strategy, this handbook goes beyond...