Real Opportunities for Banks to Engage in Digital Assets

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As we described in a previous article, digital assets are enjoying faster adoption and development, in part due to their potential to be an alternative investable asset class. Similarly, decentralized finance (DeFi) is being seen, at least to some extent, as an alternative to centralized and regulated financial services that can enable greater financial inclusion of the unbanked or underbanked. Digital assets have the potential for spectacular growth during the next decade, led by developments of central bank digital currencies (CBDC), stablecoins and tokenization of assets.

This alone would help explain why established banks are exploring opportunities in this space. But besides the benefits of retaining existing customers and the speed, cost and efficiency gains in blockchain/DLT, engaging in digital asset activities can also provide these banks with opportunities to attract new customer segments, unlock new revenue streams and differentiate themselves from competitors.

Crypto for Payments and Custody Services

With numerous use cases in digital asset services, banks may choose to offer commercial banking services to businesses that hold crypto assets, enable payment processing and settlements for digital transactions, and evolve from providing traditional custody services (safekeeping, depositary and settlement services) to next-generation of secure digital asset custody services (staking and access to DeFi markets).

Other opportunities include providing merchant processing services using crypto assets, crypto wallets and rewards, crypto-based savings accounts and operating crypto ATMs. For instance, Mastercard partnered with Bakkt, allowing banks to provide bitcoin wallets and offer crypto rewards on debit and credit cards. Quontic Bank offers a Bitcoin Rewards Checking Account that allows customers to earn Bitcoin rewards by swiping a debit card.

Banks can offer peer-to-peer (P2P) crypto payments through existing online banking platforms or use cryptocurrencies as rails for international fiat transactions. Cross-border payments, gig economy payments, stablecoin settlements, CBDC-based wholesale and retail payments and decentralized payment rails are the areas of potential digital asset-based payments in the next few years. Stablecoins and CBDCs are digital assets with potential use cases in payments and can be used in trading and settlement as well as to improve cross-border payments, inter-bank clearing and settlement and financial inclusion.

Recently, Federal Reserve Bank of New York (NY Fed) launched a 12-week pilot program to test the feasibility of the digital dollar based on DLT with Mastercard, SWIFT and big banks like BNY Mellon, Citi, HSBC, PNC Bank, TD Bank, Truist, U.S. Bank and Wells Fargo. In addition, the NY Fed’s innovation center has collaborated with the Monetary Authority of Singapore to jointly experiment with the potential for wholesale CBDCs to improve the efficiency of cross-border wholesale payments involving multiple currencies.

In these ways, banks can capitalize on multiple revenue opportunities, such as crypto trading fees, DeFi yield by becoming liquidity providers for DeFi loans, tiered subscription models, cross-selling products and exchange fees for digital asset custody services, transaction fees, stablecoin issuance and redemption fees and CBDC deposit-based revenue.

The following chart outlines the digital asset use cases with the greatest potential.

Digital Asset Use Cases

Description

Examples

Trading/Investing

  • Banks can offer innovative digital asset trading products.
  • Allow investors to buy, sell and hold cryptocurrencies directly from the banking app and offer crypto investments and savings at a glance with enhanced security and insurance.

Goldman Sachs offers OTC crypto trading, including options and futures, in Bitcoin and Ether.

USAA does not directly offer crypto investing services but allows USD deposits into a licensed crypto exchange, like Coinbase, to buy digital assets.

Custody

  • Digital asset custody is the process of storing crypto, NFTs and other digital assets safely and securely. Custody services allow banks to cross-sell (fiat or crypto products) to customers, generate yields by staking or lending the digital asset they hold, or offer exchange services to clients.
  • Crypto custody services include safekeeping, analytics, asset servicing, trading, pricing and valuation, lending, payments and settlements. Wallet types include hot or cold wallets, multi-signature wallets and multi-party computation wallets.

BNY Mellon, JP Morgan and Citi partnered with Fireblocks, NYDIG and Metaco, respectively, to offer crypto custody services.

Nomura’s JV Komainu custody and Standard Chartered’s Zodia custody (a digital asset JV between Standard Chartered and Northern Trust) platforms are examples where banks used their in-house technology to build digital asset custody solutions.

 

Lending and Collateral Management

  • Like any other secured loan, banks can offer crypto-backed loans. Borrowers can use digital asset as collateral for the loan.
  • Crypto-backed loans can be an alternative method to access increased capital.

Goldman Sachs has a Bitcoin-backed cash loan product. Coinbase has taken out a loan from Goldman Sachs using its Bitcoin assets as collateral.

Customers Bank plans to roll out loans using crypto as collateral for existing institutional customers.

Staking

  • Staking involves locking a certain amount of digital asset for a set period of time and holding digital asset as a security to validate transactions in a blockchain network. By holding their digital asset, clients can generate a return and win rewards.

Digital bank Revolut offers crypto staking for customers in the U.K.

SEBA Bank’s Ethereum staking service is an institutional-grade offering enabling clients to earn staking rewards on Ethereum.

Asset Tokenization

  • Tokenization of assets uses blockchain/DLTs to create a digital representation, i.e., a digital token of real-world assets like cash, equity shares, bonds, loans, commodities, VC funds, NFTs, intellectual property, real estate, luxury goods, artwork, sports teams, carbon credits, patents and vintage cars. This gives issuers and investors real-time visibility into assets and efficiently transfers ownership and settles transactions.

U.S. Bancorp has invested in tokenized assets network firm, Ownera, which is working to digitize paper-heavy and illiquid private markets.

The DTCC, a centralized clearing and settlement company, is launching a platform that will enable tokenization of private market securities.

 

Understanding what’s happening in the market is key to making a move. But it’s changing rapidly – and easy to get left behind. ISG helps financial institutions think through the use cases that make the most sense for them. Contact us to get started.

Check out the next article in this four-part series about banks and digital assets here.

 

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