Blockchain and distributed ledgers technology (DLT) are gaining momentum and attention in financial services, and could be the next big disrupter in this industry.
IDC Financial Insights has unveiled two new reports to explore the specific impact on financial services firms:
* Business Strategy: Smart Contracts and Blockchain Ledgers and Compliance, which takes a look at the challenges and opportunities that firms face in developing and deploying distributed blockchain ledgers technology (DLT) and smart contracts.
* Business Stretecy: Exploring Blockchains and Payment Strategy is designed to provide an objective overview of the current state of blockchain technology and its potential in payments.
DLT has captured the attention of market participants across financial services as a valuable tool to help provide new products and services, improve compliance programs, reduce operating costs, and improve liquidity.
IDC Financial Insights believes DLT will be a disruptive force in financial services and recommends financial firms and market participants actively research and experiment with DLT and smart contracts.
Highlights of the new report include:
* Financial firms have become increasingly interested in DLT and smart contracts as a way to reduce post-trade settlement time, improve liquidity, improve compliance recordkeeping (eg. AML and KYC), and develop a platform to help deliver new products and services.
* Regulators are interested in blockchain and smart contracts because new transaction and post-trade settlement models can help improve compliance programmes and record keeping by providing consolidated records and transaction histories.
* Intermediaries are actively evaluating blockchain solutions and smart contracts and how new platforms will affect their existing business models and technology investments.
Bill Fearnley, research director at IDC Financial Insights, says: “We believe the blockchain ledger space will be a marathon versus a sprint given the myriad of technology, business process, and regulatory opportunities and challenges that need to be addressed and solved.
“However, firms should be actively researching blockchain ledger solutions today and deploying experiments and proof of concept projects. As DLT gains momentum, it will be harder for firms to catch up with leading firms and market participants that are working with these technologies now.”
While blockchain has become a hot topic in payments, the purpose of this new study is to provide an objective overview of the current state of the technology and its potential in payments as well as examine questions about the technology’s utility, scalability and reliability.
IDC Financial Insights believes blockchain will affect payments in profound ways and that now is the time to understand the technology, why it is well-suited for changing the payment space, and how to begin integrating it into product and strategy plans.
Specifically, the report covers the following:
* Interest around blockchain technology has already spawned new products and companies, and financial institutions and their vendors are beginning to unpack the technology from the hype realising there is much to appreciate in this disruptive new approach.
* Multiple issues and challenges facing the development and deployment of blockchain technology need to be addressed, including questions about scale, reliability, and regulation.
* Financial institutions, vendors, and participants in the payment space need to evaluate blockchain technology and understand what they should consider when thinking strategically about it.
James Wester, research director at IDC Financial Insights and author of the report, says: “Blockchain has emerged during a time of incredible change in the payment space. Even though banks and technology vendors are grappling with many issues right now, they should pay particular attention to blockchain.
“It represents a complete shift in the way electronic transactions have been handled for decades, and participants in the market should begin thinking about how they will adapt to it.”