As more institutional investors become comfortable with decentralised finance (DeFI) the business of trading will become increasingly virtual, to the extent that centralised exchanges could be eclipsed within ten years.
“The way in which DeFi is going currently means that over the medium term you will see the replacement of all traditional centralised exchanges with virtual marketplaces which are regulated and have a tier one markets licence,” says Jon Deane, CEO of Australian digital asset manager and technology firm Trovio.
Deane points to Australia’s superannuation sector, which is currently sitting on assets worth $3.5btrn. Currently these funds earn extra returns on these assets via stock loans deals which are managed by financial institutions such as Northern Trust, or Citi.
Supers looking at DeFI
However, the CEO says the technology currently exists for large-scale asset holders to pledge via small contracts into liquidity pools or sell these assets directly via DeFi exchanges and therefore bank all the fees which are currently earned by intermediaries and exchanges.
“The superannuation funds are sitting on billions of dollars of equities, and they could in theory be pledging those equities directly into a virtual marketplace, using smart contracts, and thereby earning all the transaction fees which are currently going to third parties”.
The process is already well established in the crypto sector with users linking their digital wallets to DeFi exchanges.
So far these volumes have been driven by individuals and lower profile institutional investors but the Trovio CEO says the concept is equally valid for large scale money managers.
Regulated DeFi exchanges
Deane says an institutional focussed DeFi exchange would operate as a decentralised app (DAPP), with members of the exchange also included in the decentralised autonomous organisation (DAO) which runs it, thereby effectively owning the related token.
Members would then be able to vote on how the exchange will operate.
“So there isn’t a necessity for a centralised exchange apart from regulation. So while you need a tier one market licence to operate an exchange it can be set-up as a decentralised, virtual marketplace.
There are still issues to be addressed with DAOs, such as how do you define it as a company and what is the mechanism for levying tax on these structures. Overcoming these hurdles will probably take five to 10 years. But it’s definitely coming.”
Australia looks at DAO structures
These hurdles are being addressed, certainly in Australia. The chair of the Senate Select Committee on Australia as a Technology and Financial Centre Andrew Bragg authored a report in October which specifically called for the establishment of a DAO company structure.
Following the report issuance Senator Bragg tweeted that, “DAOs are the future. And the now!”
Regulatory clarity is important for the future development of DeFi but investor interest is critical to…
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