Blockchain: The start of a whole new era of banking PROJECT SPONSOR
Blockchain: the start of a whole new era of banking Written by Stuart Hodge Produced by George Tweed
3
Anthony Macey of Barclays tells us about how Blockchain technology may be set to transform the world of value trading and how some data reconciliation issues may now be a thing of the past
M
any banks seem daunted by the revolution happening in trade finance at the moment. New technologies seem to be transforming the marketplace on an almost constant basis and there can be no doubt about how much the goalposts have shifted since the emergence of Bitcoin eight years ago. But for Anthony Macey, Head of Blockchain R&D for Barclays, keeping up-to-date with these technological trends and advances is what gets him up in the morning. He’s at the forefront of the banking industry’s knowledge base on Blockchain, which has emerged as a decentralised, distributed, peer-topeer network enabling the transfer of value. Blockchain also enables the records of disparate parties within the transaction to be synchronised,
4
facilitating a seamless and digital value exchange without the need for a centralised trust or intermediary. Like most creative ventures, Barclays’ foray into the world of Blockchain all started off with an idea, conceived between Macey and his former colleague Simon Taylor. “Between the two of us we brought Bitcoin and Blockchain to the attention of the company as something we should probably be looking at,” explains Macey. “Throughout 2014 we worked to get a better appreciation of what the technology was, the risk play and what we could potentially do with it. At the end of the year, we held a two-day summit where we had a number of people from the Bitcoin and Blockchain space around the world along with academics,
The financial marketplace is changing and technologies like Blockchain offer the industry the competitive edge to take advantage
w w w. b a rc l a y s . c o . u k
5
“Sometimes there might be disagreement between two data types and no way of understanding why – so we thought, maybe we can use Blockchain to make sure we never have these reconciliation problems again” – Anthony Macey, Head of R&D for Blockchain
6
experts, consultants and a couple will apply different business logic to of people from other banks as well. a data set to get their answers.” “We identified between 45 and 50 “So very early on we thought, potential use cases and that gave us maybe we can use a Blockchain in a remit to then look at this. Now we’ve order to make sure we never have spent the last two-and-a-half years or these reconciliation problems again. so working on it pretty much full-time.” It’s feasible to use the transparency So how does Blockchain work on and auditability of Blockchain in order a day-to-day basis then and how to track where data is going, how it’s can it benefit a company being used and what logic like Barclays? is being applied to that. “Being a large “It becomes very corporation we have useful because then, a very large data rather than trying to estate and that identify where the data, for obvious source data is and Number of reasons, is kept very where it’s come from, employees at securely,” says Macey. you can then start to Barclays “There are a number do other things. On top of of types of databases across that, if you’re able to supply secure the company so, when performing data ideas into the platform, then analytics, I’d need to locate the you can run logic based on that.” data, locate the owner of that As well as providing additional data, then pull it over and join it to functionality, Blockchain is also a another data set. Sometimes there potentially quicker, more secure might be disagreement between and more flexible solution, meaning the two data types and no real that from a business standpoint, way of understanding why. That’s visibility can be enhanced, risk because different business areas removed and costs lowered. Barclays
129k+
w w w. b a rc l a y s . c o . u k
7
Blockchain is a decentralised, distributed, peer-to-peer network enabling the transfer of value.
8
believe they’re at the forefront of this emerging technology and two landmarks achieved last year serve to embolden those claims. In April, the Smart Contract Templates application developed by Barclays took centre stage in the first ever public demonstration of the R3 Corda platform for shared banking ledgers, in front of more than 800 people at London’s O2 Arena. The technology has come a long way in a short space of time, as Macey is quick to acknowledge. “The early idea behind Blockchain was around reconciliation of data across multiple parties, that’s what Bitcoin ledger effectively does, but where things started to get a little more interesting was when a company called Ethereum was founded and they started talking about the idea of building smart contracts,” he says. “A smart contract is essentially a digital representation of a commercial contract which self-executes based on conditions, similar to the way a vending machine works in the real world – where we put our money,
type in a location code and are provided with what we’ve paid for. “Our investment banking team did some work on reusable templates that could be deployed and reduce a lot of the inefficiencies and duplication of effort involved in the establishment of standardised contracts. “That was a world first and they showed that, functionally, this could work – and it’s the starting point for more thinking down that route and the IB CTO Office have released two academic white papers which explain a lot of the detail behind that. “We then did a lot of work with law firms and legislators around understanding where the difference between just being code and being a legal contract potentially lies, and how to strike that balance.” And then in September, Barclays and start-up company Wave became the first organisations to execute a global trade transaction using Blockchain technology. The letter of credit transaction between Ornua (formerly the Irish Dairy Board) and Seychelles Trading Company was
w w w. b a rc l a y s . c o . u k
9
the first to have trade documentation handled on the new Wave platform, with funds sent via Swift. “From a banking point of view, we had control of that, and had boot-strapped it,” says Macey. However, from a client and open-world point of view we still had to deal with carriers, customs, port authorities and the like. “I think one of the easiest things to forget when you’re working with this technology day-in day-out, is that it’s still a relatively new thing to most people in the world. So when you go to them with this solution they need to go all the way back to the beginning to start to understand how this technology functions, so that they can be assured of the fact it’s going to work.” And therein lies the challenge for Anthony and
Blockchain is the technology that will change the financial industry of today
10
25.454 Barclays’ 2015 revenue
his colleagues, but he’s adamant they’re not going to rest on their laurels after such a successful 2016. “It looks like we did quite a lot of stuff in quick succession and we did,” adds Macey. “But there had been a lot of work before that which really came back to benefit our people and the business last year. 2016 was successful for us because we had the business behind us. You can’t have that kind of success on your own, you need those people sometimes just to give you a reality check in terms of what you’re delivering. “Granted, it may mean that we are
going to take slightly longer to build something that completely disrupts the financial services market, but that will come and it will come with the support of our business team telling us what actually needs to happen in that space. We’re conscious of the fact that it’s all going to take time but we will get there by each part of the business supporting each other rather than us competing with ourselves.”
w w w. b a rc l a y s . c o . u k
11
BARCLAYS 1 Churchill Place, London, E14 5HP www.barclays.co.uk