IN 1544 Mississippi College Fin back in Fintech Case Study Discussion - Programming
Case Study Study and explain the case study with answers to the following questions with substantive answers in a cohesive essay. Your paper should be at least 3 pages in length. Use proper grammar, spelling, citations, etc.1.How does Fintech compare to regular banking?2. Discuss R3 and its distributed ledger technology mission.3. What are some of the applications of cords and strategies of growing and expanding?4. What are some of the emerging markets that Fintech has impacted?Compose your essay in APA format, including the introduction and conclusion, and in-text citations for all sources used. In addition to your 3 page (minimum) essay, you must include an APA-style title page and reference page.
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IN1544
R3:
Putting the ‘Fin’ Back in FinTech
01/2019-6451
This case was written by Anne Yang, Research Associate at INSEAD, Xuexin Gao, Research Associate at PBC School of
Finance (PBCSF), Tsinghua University, Hong Zhang, visiting fellow at INSEAD Emerging Markets Institute and Phoenix
Chair Professor of Finance at PBCSF, and Massimo Massa, the Rothschild Chaired Professor of Banking at INSEAD. It
was developed jointly by INSEAD’s Emerging Markets Institute and China Finance Case Centre of PBC School of
Finance. It is intended to be used as a basis for class discussion rather than to illustrate either effective or ineffective
handling of an administrative situation.
Additional material about INSEAD case studies (e.g., videos, spreadsheets, links) can be accessed at cases.insead.edu.
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COPIES MAY NOT BE MADE WITHOUT PERMISSION. NO PART OF THIS PUBLICATION MAY BE COPIED, STORED, TRANSMITTED, REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED IN
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This document is authorized for use only by Hema Pavana Nidadavolu in BLCN 533 Finance and Blockchain-2 taught by Dana Leland, University of the Cumberlands from May 2020 to Oct
2020.
For the exclusive use of H. Nidadavolu, 2020.
“While still in its infancy, the emergence of distributed ledger technology comes at a
time when the financial services industry is poised to further embrace technological
change and efficiencies.
C. Thomas Richardson, MD, Wells Fargo Securities 1
1. Introduction
Financial technology, better known as fintech, 2 has gained prominence in recent years with the rise
of bitcoin and blockchain technology. After years of being a rebel, in May 2017 it gained
mainstream acceptance with R3’s announcement that it had raised a record US$107 million. Over
40 investors including technology and finance heavyweights like Intel, Bank of America Merrill
Lynch, UBS, HSBC, and the Singapore government joined forces with R3 to develop ‘block-chainlike’ technology to be used by major banks. 3
The investor consortium represented the largest group of global financial institutions working on
commercial applications for the distributed ledger technology at the heart of blockchain. R3’s
success in getting its existing members (clients) to invest in the company was unique – particularly
in the finance industry. The fact that some of them were blue-chip technology firms positioned R3
firmly at the confluence of technology and finance. R3 took pains to emphasize that the underlying
technology was ‘distributed ledger’ rather than blockchain. Tim Swanson, Director of Market
Research, explained the difference: “In simplest terms, a blockchain involves stringing together a
chain of containers called blocks, which bundle transactions together like batch processing,
whereas a distributed ledger like Corda does not, and instead validates each transaction (or
agreement) individually.”
2. Rise of Fintech
As the line between technology and finance became increasingly blurred, one area of fintech
blockchain created a particular buzz, both for its scope and security. Martin Arnold wrote in the
Financial Times: “Blockchains allow encrypted data on anything, from money to medical records,
to be shared between many companies, people and institutions. This protects data from fraud while
instantly updating all parties concerned.”
Whenever blockchain was mentioned, the much-hyped bitcoin sprung to mind. The surge in bitcoin
prices and the astronomical rise (and subsequent fall) in its value dominated media headlines.
1
2
3
https://techcrunch.com/2017/05/23/blockchain-consortium-r3-raises-107-million/
Fintech is broadly defined here as an industry composed of companies that use new technology and innovation
to compete in the marketplace with traditional financial institutions and intermediaries in the delivery of financial
services.
http://www.cnbc.com/2017/05/23/r3-funding-blockchain-intel-bank-of-america-hsbc.html
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2020.
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2.1. Bitcoin
Bitcoin, first referred to in a white paper of 2008 by ‘Satoshi Nakamoto’ (a pseudonym), was the
first application of blockchain technology. Although blockchain could be applied to various
industries, it came to be almost synonymous with bitcoin as part of an innovative peer-to-peer
electronic cash system enabling online payments to be transferred without an intermediary, also
referred to as ‘cryptocurrency’. It was basically a way to bypass government currency controls and
third-party payment processing intermediaries. To secure the transactions, blockchain provided the
underlying technology, recording them in a public distributed ledger and creating a peer-to-peer
network that was open, albeit anonymous.
2.2. Blockchain
The astronomical rise of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies in 2017 raised public awareness of
blockchain, but with numerous other applications (in finance, business, government) it clearly had
much greater potential. Hailed as “Web 3.0”, blockchain technology formed the backbone of a new
type of internet that allowed digital information to be distributed but not copied, and gave users the
ability to create value and authenticate digital information.
The information in a blockchain is essentially a shared (and continually reconciled) database.
Blockchain underpins a decentralized digital ledger – a secure, tamper-proof log of sensitive
activity – where transactions are not stored in a single location but hosted by millions of computers
simultaneously, accessible to anyone on the internet but safe from hackers.
Blockchain applications in banking and finance span numerous functions including international
payments, transactions in capital markets and trade finance, regulatory compliance and auditing,
protection from money laundering, and insurance.
2.3. Emergence of Fintech in Banking
Over the past decade, as the banking landscape became more competitive, banks faced increasing
cost pressure on their products and service offerings. Traditionally, banks had controlled most endto-end processing in-house, but the model started to change in response to regulatory pressure and
a growing strategic focus on core products/services, such as customer identity checks.
Fintech entered a new phase, where incumbent financial institutions, start-ups and investors
collaborated to address industry challenges and spearhead transformation. Banks and financial
services firms turned to fintech as way to either continue a vertically-integrated model or move
into a specialist role.
A study by Accenture and McLagan in January 2017 4 reported that eight of the world’s ten biggest
investment banks expected to implement blockchain, and estimated it could cut costs by up to 30\%,
saving between $8bn and $12bn. According to Richard Lumb, head of financial services at
Accenture, “The first place we will see [blockchain] have an impact is clearing houses, such as
4
https://themarketmogul.com/blockchain-rise-fintech/
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2020.
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Deutsche Börse…Today [clearing and settlement] is managed through a myriad of messages and
manual reconciliation.” He estimated that by using blockchain technology to restructure clearing
and settlement, the biggest investment banks could save US$10 billion. 5
By 2017, fintech companies generally fell into two categories: (i) competitors to financial services
companies, (ii) collaborators that provided solutions to enhance the position of existing market
players. The incumbents had ceased to regard fintech as a direct threat and began to see the value
of collaborating with – and even investing in them. In the past, a bank’s back-office functions
served primarily as ‘support functions’ – processing payments rather than generating revenue.
Now, some banks were divesting their processing units to create independent for-profit businesses
that competed head-on with the banks. Concurrently, tech-focused fintech companies sought to
join with large financial institutions to expand into markets, gain industry and regulatory
knowledge, or even cash out. They included public companies like IBM, Accenture and Visa, and
start-ups like Digital Asset Holdings, Ripple, and R3 – forming a new fintech wave.
3. R3 and its Mission in Distributed Ledger Technology
3.1. A Brief History of R3
R3 started out as a family office in 2014, investing in early-stage start-ups in the fintech space.
When the term ‘cryptocurrency’ began to repeatedly crop up on the radar, the founders organized
a series of industry roundtables, starting in September 2014, in New York City, where
representatives of early fintech players (DRW, Align Commerce, Perkins Coie, Boost VC, and
Fintech Collective) were invited to give a talk. Representatives from eight banks showed up to hear
about cryptocurrency from the experts. A second round table, this time on the West Coast (Palo
Alto), brought together Silicon Valley players like Stanford, Andreessen Horowitz, Xapo, BitGo,
Chain, Ripple, and Mirror. Representatives from 11 banks showed up. Several speakers agreed to
become advisors to R3. By the end of 2014, the family office had invested in several fintech startups including Align Commerce.
In the first quarter of 2015, R3 launched LiquidityEdge, an electronic trading platform for the US
Treasury, and it incorporated the Distributed Ledger Group (DLG) in Delaware. Henceforth it
focused its efforts on these two. A final roundtable was held in May 2015, with presentations by
Hyperledger (the company), Blockstack, Align Commerce and the Bank of England. This time, 15
bank representatives as well as a market infrastructure operator and a fintech VC firm joined in.
DLG transitioned from a working group to a commercial entity and by the end of 2015 it had
admitted 42 members and changed its name to R3.
3.2. Putting the Fin back in Fintech
Unlike other blockchains or distributed ledger technology (DLT), Corda was launched by R3 as a
DLT platform specifically for the finance industry. It was geared towards reducing industry pain
5
Ibid.
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points at a time of increasingly complex transactions. Privacy (even secrecy) was critical; access
to transaction data was restricted to a ‘need-to-know’ basis within the network. The consortiums
efforts led to the creation of an open-source distributed ledger platform with the following
characteristics:
1. Engineered for business: R3 wanted Corda to be a leading distributed ledger platform, designed
by the worlds largest financial institutions to manage legal agreements on an automatable and
enforceable basis.
2. Restricted data sharing: Corda only shared data with those with a need to view or validate it;
there was no global broadcasting of data across the network.
3. Easy integration: Corda was designed to make integration and interoperability easy. Users could
query the ledger with SQL, join external databases, perform bulk imports, and code contracts in
a range of standard languages.
4. Pluggable consensus: Corda was the only distributed ledger platform to support multiple
consensus providers employing different algorithms on the same network, enabling compliance
with local regulations.
R3’s CTO Richard Brown insisted: “We are not building a blockchain. Unlike other designs in this
space, our starting point is individual agreements between firms (state objects governed by
contract code and associated legal prose). We reject the notion that all data should be copied to
all participants, even if it is encrypted.”
R3 believed that distributed ledger technology had the potential to transform the financial services
industry. It envisioned a future in which financial agreements were recorded and automatically
managed without error and contracts were transacted seamlessly. It strove to eliminate existing
problems like duplication, reconciliation, failed matches and breaks.
Unlike other fintech firms, R3 did not originate from a financial services nor a technology firm. It
saw itself as a perfect hybrid – a firm that created technology solutions focused on finance, which
resolved confidentiality and other issues of existing blockchain technologies. It built a new
operating system (Corda) from scratch, geared to financial markets using a blockchain-based
distributed ledger platform that met the stringent standards of the financial industry and could be
tailored to any commercial scenario.
The concept of a decentralized database sought to overcome the shortcomings of shared and
distributed databases. The novel features provided by the Corda platform included new transaction
types, execution of transactions in parallel, direct peer–to-peer communication between nodes in
the network, the presence of multiple notaries employing various consensus algorithms,
elimination of global broadcast, and the sharing of data on a need-to-know basis. 6
6
http://micobo.com/main-insights-to-r3s-corda-dlt-platform/
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3.3 Distributed Ledger Technology versus Traditional Banking Architecture
Financial institutions were typically early adopters of technology and, for the most part, their
physical and manual processes had been digitalized and automated. However, opportunities
remained to improve costs and efficiency by redesigning the systems architecture. For example,
each bank maintained its own ledgers, which formed the basis of its view of agreements and
positions with respect to its customer set and its counterparts. This resulted in duplication of records
(by other banks) and inevitably inconsistencies and errors, that required reconciliation. It was these
inefficiencies that enabled distributed ledger technology (DLT) to gain traction in the industry.
DLT was made possible by three innovations: peer-to-peer networks, public key cryptography, and
consensus algorithms. 7
A distributed ledger was basically an asset database that could be shared across a network of
multiple sites, geographies and institutions. All participants (‘nodes’) within the network had an
identical copy of the ledger; entries could be updated by one, some or all participants according to
agreed rules. Updates were visible on all copies within minutes (in some cases seconds). To ensure
the accuracy and security of the assets in the ledger, entries were encrypted through the use of ‘keys’
and signatures to control ‘who could do what’.
Cutting across functions/processes such as trade finance, cross-border payments, re-insurance,
clearing and settlement – was an evolution of other peer-to-peer concepts. It gave Corda’s
blockchain platform increased flexibility and offered the following advantages:
x
Operational simplification – eliminating the need to perform reconciliation manually and
resolve ‘disputes’
x
Regulatory efficiency – enabling real-time monitoring of financial activity between
regulators and regulated entities
x
Risk reduction – counterparts no longer had to be trusted to fulfil their obligations as
agreements were codified in a shared, immutable environment
x
Reduction in clearing/settlement time
x
Improvement in liquidity/capital
x
Minimization of fraud
An important distinction lay in the fact that in other DLT data was distributed to all participants,
whereas in Corda data was shared only between the two parties involved in the transaction. While
7
According to Deloitte, three innovations laid the groundwork for the invention of DLT.
x
x
x
Peer-to-peer networks: In this model, every peer is a server and client, both supplying and consuming resources. This can
facilitate the creation of a currency without a privileged third party, among other types of decentralised financial
interactions.
Public key cryptography: used for verifying digital identity with a high degree of confidence. Cryptography enables
individual identification and exchange of bitcoin among users.
Consensus algorithms: ensure agreement between parties on a network, validate the data’s authenticity as well as
transactions, and control when it can be written into the system. This prevents double spending by ensuring chorological
recording of data.
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2020.
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a centralized ledger was controlled by a single entity, participants in a distributed ledger had shared
control of the data’s evolution (see Figure 1).
Figure 1: Other Distributed Ledger Technology vs. Corda
Source: R3
In short, Corda created a private or ‘permissioned blockchain’ – that was expected to eventually
dominate the majority of commercial applications, particularly in the capital markets. Permissioned
variations added a layer of privileging to determine who could participate in the chain. Goldman
Sachs anticipated that the majority of commercial applications would use some form of
permissioned model 8 based on the principle that the only parties with access to the details of a
financial transaction should be the parties themselves and others with a legitimate ‘need to know’.
In most blockchains, all participants had to reach consensus over the order of the transactions that
had taken place, irrespective of whether they had taken part in a particular transaction or not. The
order of the transactions was crucial for the consistency of the ledger. If a definitive order could
not be established, there was a risk of double-spending – i.e., that two parallel transactions
transferred the same coin to different recipients, thus making money out of thin air. As the network
might involve mutually untrustworthy or anonymous parties, a consensus mechanism was required
to protect it from fraudulent participants attempting double-spending. Typically, this mechanism
was established by data mining based on proof-of-work (PoW). All participants had to agree upon
8
The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., ‘Profiles in Innovation Blockchain – Putting Theory into Practice’, May 24,
2016
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a common ledger and had access to all entries ever recorded. However, PoW unfavourably affected
transactions processing performance; albeit anonymized, they were nevertheless accessible to all
participants, which was problematic for applications that required a higher degree of privacy.
In contrast, Corda’s interpretation of consensus was more refined - based neither on PoW nor data
mining. Operating in permission mode, Corda provided more fine-grained access to records,
enhanced privacy and consensus at the transaction level by involving only relevant parties. It ...
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