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

Smart Contracts Show Potential; Progress Limited So Far

Subscribe to our newsletter

Experts on the deployment of blockchain technology to handle smart contracts, which facilitate trust between parties in a transaction, are disagreeing about how much blockchain is being applied to smart contracts so far.

The battle was joined in a panel discussion at the Blockchain for Wall Street conference hosted by the Wall Street Blockchain Alliance on November 29. According to Preston Byrne, chief operating officer and general counsel at Monax Industries, the maker of the Eris blockchain platform, “nothing” is in production currently for smart contracts, although he sees prototypes in the works that could be in production by the end of 2017.

IBM, the Swiss non-profit Ethereum Foundation, and New York and London based technology company R3 have emerged as the leading blockchain platforms for the financial services industry. Byrne gave an edge to Ethereum’s Solidity language for smart contracts processing. “Our bets are on [Solidity], because we see the most enthusiasm about it,” he said. “It’s organically built from scratch.”

The Hyperledger open source project for blockchain technology is being applied to smart contracts, however, according to Bart Cant, blockchain community leader at Capgemini Financial Services. “We see new initiatives like Hyperledger, Corda [R3’s platform] and other platforms jumping into the smart contract space,” he said. “It’s an evolution we’re going to see and continue to see. I’m not sure who the winner is going to be, but we’re looking at all pieces of it. Each brings specific aspects strengths to the environment. We will see that evolve over time.”

Use of blockchain for smart contracts by investment banking firms, particularly for trading and settlement of syndicated loans, could bring several benefits, according to a Capgemini study. Settlement of syndicated loan transactions could be reduced from 20 days down to 6 to 10 days; demand could be increased by 5 to 6%, and income from such transactions could increase by anywhere from $2 billion to $7 billion annually, according to the study.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Related content

WEBINAR

Recorded Webinar: From Data to Alpha: AI Strategies for Taming Unstructured Data

Unstructured data and text now accounts for the majority of information flowing through financial markets organisations, spanning research content, corporate disclosures, communications, alternative data, and internal documents. While AI has created new opportunities to extract signals, many firms are discovering that value is constrained not by models, but by the quality of the content, architecture,...

BLOG

LSEG Launches Model-as-a-Service, Extending Marketplace Strategy into Financial Models

LSEG has launched Model-as-a-Service (MaaS), expanding its marketplace strategy beyond data distribution into the hosting, commercialisation and integration of financial models. At launch, Societe Generale has joined as a provider, making fixed income, FX, ESG and equities analytics available through the platform. The move positions LSEG not just as a data vendor, but as an...

EVENT

AI in Capital Markets Summit London

Now in its 3rd year, the AI in Capital Markets Summit returns with a focus on the practicalities of onboarding AI enterprise wide for business value creation. Whilst AI offers huge potential to revolutionise capital markets operations many are struggling to move beyond pilot phase to generate substantial value from AI.

GUIDE

Trading Regulations Handbook 2022

Welcome to the third edition of A-Team Group’s Trading Regulations Handbook, a publication designed to help you gain a full understanding of regulations that have an impact on your trading operations, data and technology. The handbook provides details of each regulation and its requirements, as well as ‘at-a-glance’ summaries, regulatory timelines and compliance deadlines, and...