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Blockchain for Finance
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Peter OakesBoard Director & Advisory CommitteeFintech and RegtechDay 2 – Co Chair
BoardDirector Advisory
Boards
Fintech
Regtech
Platforms
LawBanking/Finserv
Training
StrategicIntelligence
CapitalRaising
RegulatorAdvisor
Peter Oakes, Company Board and Advisory Board Member - FinServ,FinTech, RegTech and Service Providers
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
1) Fintech Ireland www.fintechireland.com
2) Regtech Ireland www.regtechireland.com
3) Fintech UK www.fintechuk.com
4) Regtech UK www.regtechUK.com
5) UKRegtech www.UKregtech.com
Increasing Regulatory Costs (1/2)Free Platforms
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
Fintech Ireland Event Collaborators
Dave Anderson, Fintech community organiser and DevOpsTransformation Consultant
https://ie.linkedin.com/in/daveandersonireland@supergingerdave @gingertechie
Peter O’Halloran, Vice President & General Manager,eCommerce, EMEA at First Data
https://ie.linkedin.com/in/peterohalloran @p_ohalloran
Alex Lee, Investor and Board Advisor to FinTech firmshttps://uk.linkedin.com/in/alexjameslee @AlexLeeFinTech
4© Fintech Ireland / www.fintechireland.com
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
Fintech Ireland – By the Numbers
1. Origin of Fintech Ireland
2. Numbers 120,000+ = number of visitors in last year 16,500 = number of current average monthly visits 4,000 = followers on twitter (8,500 across all our fintech
twitter accounts) 1,100 = number of fintech enthusiasts who subscribe to
the email list 40 = number of local & international events
5© Fintech Ireland / www.fintechireland.com
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
Fintech Ireland – in one word
FREE6
© Fintech Ireland / www.fintechireland.com
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7© Fintech Ireland / www.fintechireland.com
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
Where does Fintech Ireland Fit?
© Fintech Ireland / www.fintechireland.com
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
Many VoicesOne Message
We Connect the Dots
© Fintech Ireland / www.fintechireland.com
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
We support a number of initiatives to put Irish Fintech on the global map, including
The Fintech 50 (www.thefintech50.com) we promote the inclusion of Irish Fintech on the annual list 2017 saw the inclusion of two Irish Fintech - Fenergo and AQ Metrics 2018 should see even more Irish fintech on the list
The Fintech 20 Ireland: we’re one of the three original stakeholders, together with Irish Tech News & TheFintech 50. Have today confirmed our commitment to the 2017 event this October (www.irishtechnews.com)
Announcing Partnerships with further overseas hubs and movements
Recent / upcoming trips: Most of Europe, USA (NY and SanFran) and Australia
Talk to me about sponsoring and supporting Fintech Ireland It’s time for a revamped strategy and facelift!
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© Fintech Ireland / www.fintechireland.com
International engagement and future development
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Fintech Ireland – Map (1/2) (Dave Anderson)
© Fintech Ireland / www.fintechireland.com
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
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Fintech Ireland – Map (2/2)136 firms on Map
Top 3 sectors:
• Payments 35 (26%)• Regulation 20 (15%)• Accounting 13 (10%)
© Fintech Ireland / www.fintechireland.com
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
Regulated Fintech (Payments & E-Money)
Authorised by Central Bank: 2 x E-money 13 x Payment Services (PS)
Authorised in EEA, passportinto Ireland: 554 x E-Money & PS
13© Fintech Ireland / www.fintechireland.com
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
Financial Services - Employment
50,000 - employed in FinServ
35,000 - employed in international FinServ these employers contribute €2bn per year in taxes
7,000 - employed in Fintech
10,000 - target for increasing direct employmentin the international Finserv by 2020
14© Fintech Ireland / www.fintechireland.com
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
Ireland – A Blockchain Leader
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Funderbeam - BlockchainReport 2017
Blockchain industry hasgrown since 2013 fromfunding circa $75mn to$856mn.
North America has seen themost funds raised, butIreland is reported at 6.26%
© Fintech Ireland / www.fintechireland.com
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
Funding Figures - www.IVAC.ie (1/2)
Irish tech firms raised €500mn in first half of 2017 (actually it was€498.7mn) 3% increase on H1 2016 (€486mn)
16© Fintech Ireland / www.fintechireland.com
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
Funding Figures - www.IVAC.ie (2/2)
The H1 2017 figures from the Irish Venture CapitalAssociation note the following fintech raises:
Deposify €200k Flender €1.5mn Plynk €25mn YepUp €570k Rockall €450k Arex €3mn
17© Fintech Ireland / www.fintechireland.com
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
CapitalCapital
© Fintech Ireland / www.fintechireland.com
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
The dread ‘B’ Word - ‘Brexit’ (1/2)
Without doubt, Brexit will have a positive &negative influence on Ireland
100+ enquiries setting up in Ireland
In terms of FinServ & FinTech, positives include: UK based firms looking for a second home in Ireland international companies which would otherwise have
gravitated to UK as first EU home, now looking atIreland
could we snare a regulator?
19© Fintech Ireland / www.fintechireland.com
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
The dread ‘B’ Word - ‘Brexit’ (2/2)
© Fintech Ireland / www.fintechireland.com
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
Some Observations
This a controversial issue (actually, there’s multiple issues here!) There is little consensus within traditional finserv industry about
virtual currencies and blockchain, and their applications Therefore there is little consensus between industry and
regulators and central banks But this doesn’t mean that we should shy away from challenges
& opportunities presented by cryptocurrencies and,separately, distributed ledger technology (e.g. blockchain)
There must be continual open and meaningful dialogue amongall stakeholders
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
Regulation & FinServ / FinTechUnderstanding Central Bank and Regulators
Three things Central Banks / Regulators care(deeply) about:
Financial StabilityMarket IntegrityConsumer Protection
Important for incumbents & disrupters to thinkcarefully about what regulators care about!
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
Central Banks & Anxiety
Anxiety 1 - central banks fear losing control of currency ? Example 1 - Chinese central bank banned initial coin offerings of
bitcoin-based currencies. Led to a 15% drop in the value ofcryptocurrencies
Anxiety 2 - central banks fear losing control of infrastructure (i.e.banking) and the railroad (i.e. payments system)?
Example 2 - Basel Committee on Banking Supervision and theWorld Economic Forum put out lengthy papers on their concernsand the state of play. There is little consensus with industry
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Some examples of how cryptocurrencies areregulated Money Remittance (e.g. under money transfer and payment services directive) Bureau de change / other forms of exchange Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing (e.g. EU and other international
requirements) Licensing of activities (e.g. bitcoin licence) Taxation (e.g. capital gains and VAT/GST) EU: October 2015, the Court of Justice ruled that the exchange of traditional
currencies for units of the ‘bitcoin’ virtual currency is exempt from VAT. Thejudgement also, for the purposes of EU tax law, considers bitcoin to be a currencyrather than a commodity and that bitcoins should be treated as a means ofpayment.
Countries where bitcoin is, per se, ‘illegal’: Bolivia, Ecuador, Kyrgyzstan andBangladesh
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One US Bank CEO’s thoughts on bitcoin
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4th & 5th Anti Money Laundering Directives
Amendments to theJuly 2017 4AMLD
4AMLD 5AMLD
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AML/CTF Policy (5AMLD)
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AML/CTF Proportionality (5AMLD)
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Proposed amendments to the existing 4th Anti MoneyLaundering Directive (4AMLD) As part of a series of proposals to strength AML/CTF the European
Commission, published in July 2016, there is a proposal impacting virtualcurrencies the EC proposals as a way of strengthening the 4AMLD in lightof recent terrorist attacks in Europe.
Proposed Article 3 (18) (new) - Virtual currencies are defined as means “adigital representation of value that is neither issued by a central bank or apublic authority, nor necessarily attached to a fiat currency, but is acceptedby natural or legal persons as a means of payment and can be transferred,stored or traded electronically.”
Proposed Article 2(1) (g) and (h) (new) – “(g) providers engaged primarilyand professionally in exchange services between virtual currencies and fiatcurrencies; and (h) wallet providers offering custodial services ofcredentials necessary to access virtual currencies.”
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
Proposed amendments to the existing 4th Anti MoneyLaundering Directive (4AMLD) Proposed Article 47 para 1 (replacement) – “1. Member States shall ensure that
providers of exchanging services between virtual currencies and fiat currencies,custodian wallet providers, currency exchange and cheque cashing offices, and trust orcompany service providers are licensed or registered, and that providers of gamblingservices are regulated.”
Proposed Art 65 (2) new – “The report shall be accompanied, if necessary, byappropriate proposals, including, where appropriate, with respect to virtual currencies,empowerments to set-up and maintain a central database registering users' identitiesand wallet addresses accessible to FIUs, as well as self-declaration forms for the use ofvirtual currency users.”
Upshot = virtual currency platforms and wallet providers to be within scope of thedirective and will be ‘obliged entities’, with the same obligations as banks, insurers,accountants and tax advisors (i.e. among other things, verifying customers’ identities,policies & procedures for detecting and preventing ML/TF, implementing systems &controls, monitoring transactions, reporting suspicious transactions and training staffand directors).
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Recent EU Activity on Fintech, Regtech & Blockchain– Parliament & Commission & EBA
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EU CommissionEU Parliament EBA
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EU Parliament Report
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EC Consultation
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EBA Discussion Paper
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Increasing Regulatory and Litigation Costs (1/2)
• The six largest US banks spent US$70.2BN on compliancein 2013, twice the figure of US$34.7 billion spent in 2007.1
• In 2015, the Financial Times estimated that some of theworld’s largest banks each spent an additional US$4 billiona year on compliance since the financial crisis.2
• During 2017, bank litigation costs hit $260bn — with$65bn more to come.3
1 "The Regulatory Price-Tag: Cost Implications of Post-Crisis Regulatory Reform," Federal Financial Analytics; see also: "Nuns With Guns: The StrangeDay-to- Day Struggles Between Bankers and Regulators," The Wall Street Journal2 "Banks Face Pushback Over Surging Compliance and Regulatory Costs," Financial Times3 “Bank litigation costs hit $260bn — with $65bn more to come,” Financial Times
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
Increasing Regulatory and Litigation Costs (2/2)- the “societal good” argument for Regtech!
• “Global banks misconduct costshave reached $320 billion ... thatcould otherwise have supportedup to $5 trillion of lending tohouseholds and business … butthere is a bigger cost ...”
• Mark Carney, Governor, Bank ofEngland (21 March 2017)
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US - SECOne key regulatory issue is whether blockchain applicationsrequire registration under existing Commission regulatory regimes,such as those for transfer agents or clearing agencies. We areactively exploring these issues and their implications. [31 March2016]
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Mary Jo White,Chairwoman
Securities & Exchange Commission
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US - CFTC
If Allowed to Thrive, Blockchain May Finally Give RegulatorsTransparency - Speech
I was on Wall Street, serving as a senior executive of one of theworld’s major trading platforms for credit default swaps, thenthe epicenter of systemic risk [12 April 2016]
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Christopher Giancarlo, a Member ofthe US Commodity Futures TradingCommission
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Australia - ASIC
We will need to find the right balance between speed of execution andstreamlining of business processes
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As regulators and policy makers, we need toensure what we do is about harnessing theopportunities and the broader economic benefits –not standing in the way of innovation anddevelopment [December 2015]
Greg Medcraft, Chairman,ASIC (& ex-IOSCO)
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IOSCO
You know who's bought theparticular product, so that's goodfrom a market abuse perspective,of controlling market abuse[December 2015]
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One of the big failures of global financial reform has been the traderepositories ..in the middle of those 29 trade repository complexes,you've got commercial interests, privacy issues, data protection,distrust among regulators and no harmonization of the underlyingdata
David Wright, Secretary-General, IOSCO
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UK - FCA (1/2)Might the blockchain transform theway the regulators work? I absolutely agree with that. I think thereare a lot of benefits to be harnessed from distributed ledger, in termsof traceability and tracking, that makes it easier for us
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I think regulators do now perceivethis to be important; the degreeof importance will probably differbetween regulators [21 January2016]
Makoto Seta, SeniorAssociate, FCA
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
UK - FCA (2/2)some key opportunities .. include managing regulatory requirements moreefficiently, and, an opportunity for us to understand how we can best supportdevelopments and potentially adopt some RegTech solutions ourselves. Oneexample could be distributed ledger technology, sometimes more popularlyknown as ‘block chain’
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The current development of distributed ledgertechnology has the potential to revolutionise financialservices; whether it is the panacea of all ills in thefinancial world is yet to be seen
Christopher Woolard, Director,Strategy, FCA
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
UK - PSRRole of the PSR is interesting
How about making blockchain a ‘designated payment system’, likeBacs, Cheque & Credit, CHAPS, Faster Payments Scheme, LINK,Northern Ireland Cheque Clearing, MasterCard, Visa Europe
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Lack of a long term UK strategy forBlockchain could result in the UK missing anopportunity [January 2016 – HorizontalScanning Working Group]
www.fintechireland.com www.peteroakes.com [email protected] @fintechireland @oakeslaw© Fintech Ireland © Peter Oakes
Some areas where Blockchain could disrupt?1. Financial Services Enterprise Risk Management AML / KYC / CDD Regulatory Reporting Tax Management Portfolio Risk Management Trade Monitoring Quantitative Analytics Operations Risk Management
Finserv = banking, insurance, MiFID,trade finance, consumer finance,mutual funds, investment &pensions etc
2. Government Legislation
3. Environment, Health,Safety & Quality
4. Vendor Risk Management
5. Healthcare
6. Identification / BackgroundChecks
7. General ComplianceManagement
8. Information Security /Cybersecurity
9. Cannabis (increasinglegalising of substance inUS and problems posed forpayments processors)
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KYCkr floats on ASX- Blockchain is the future of ID
David Cassidy, themanaging director of KYCkrsays blockchain is thefuture of its businessidentity check business
We are being pressured bythe banks to have thiscompetency; they want thisyesterday … Blockchain isa given, you have to do it
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Irish Dairy Board Example
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Australian Cotton Bales Example
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Thank youhttps://ie.linkedin.com/in/peteroakes
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[email protected]@fintechuk.com
Ireland: +353 87 273 1434UK: +44 75 635 26834
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