• Welcome to the Online Discussion Groups, Guest.

    Please introduce yourself here. We'd love to hear from you!

    If you are a CompTIA member you can find your regional community here and get posting.

    This notification is dismissable and will disappear once you've made a couple of posts.
  • We will be shutting down for a brief period of time on 9/24 at around 8 AM CST to perform necessary software updates and maintenance; please plan accordingly!
K

Kathleen Martin

Guest
As blockchain takes on an increasingly significant role in e-commerce, the banking sector has been slow to embrace the technology. Still, blockchain and decentralized ledger technology—a blockchain cousin—have “a massive opportunity to disrupt the $5 trillion-plus banking industry by disintermediating the key services that banks provide,” according to CB Insights.
Here’s how:
Payments: “Today, trillions of dollars slosh around the world via an antiquated system of slow payments and added fees,” CB Insights writes. By establishing a decentralized ledger for payments, blockchain technology could facilitate faster payments at lower fees.
Loans and credit: By eliminating the need for gatekeepers in the loan and credit industry, blockchain technology could lead to lower interest rates and increase the security of borrowing. Blockchain-enabled lending could also offer a way to provide personal loans to a larger pool of consumers.
John Marsano, president and CEO of Inheritance Advanced, a financial services firm, predicts that syndicated lending through blockchain will become popular in the near future. “Blockchain technology can let a group of lenders, commercial banks in this case, give out loans to several people or other groups,” he says. “Processing of such lending can take up to a month, but with blockchain, it can be shortened significantly and made much more transparent.”
Clearance and settlement: Distributed ledgers can reduce operational costs and bring us closer to real-time transactions between financial institutions, CB Insights notes.
Fundraising: Initial coin offerings are experimenting with a new model of financing that unbundles access to capital from traditional capital-raising services and firms.
Trade finance: By replacing the cumbersome, paper-heavy bill-of-lading process in the trade finance industry, blockchain technology can create more transparency, security and trust among trade parties globally. Using blockchain and distributed ledger technology could also shorten delivery times and reduce the use of paper.
Know-your-customer processes and fraud prevention: By storing customer information on decentralized blocks, blockchain technology can make sharing information between financial institutions easier and safer.
Just how long this disruption will last remains to be seen—though it could end sooner rather than later.
“Blockchain is moving into mainstream prospects, decentralizing many of their functions,” says Sanjay Deshpande, executive vice president and head of banking and financial services, Americas, for Virtusa Corp. “Fintechs are trying to overcome the challenges of blockchain security and bank regulation to raise the efficiency of banking itself. … The rest of the industry is struggling to find their own blockchain initiatives and not be left behind.”
Indeed, Deloitte’s 2021 Global Blockchain Survey found that the financial services industry knows that change is coming. Of the 1,280 global senior leaders and practitioners surveyed, nearly 80% believe that digital assets will be very or somewhat important to their respective industries in the next 24 months. Moreover, 73% of respondents fear their organizations will lose a competitive advantage if they fail to adopt blockchain and digital assets.
Continue reading: https://www.bai.org/banking-strategies/article-detail/blockchain-banks-on-the-future/
 

Attachments

  • p0007365.m07013.bai_logo.jpg
    p0007365.m07013.bai_logo.jpg
    9.7 KB · Views: 33
  • Like
Reactions: Kathleen Martin