The blockchain revolution is gunning for the gold market.
Public online ledgers that emerged from the explosive markets for bitcoin, a virtual currency, have already drawn the attention of businesses from banks to retailers who see blockchain systems as a revolutionary way to verify and record transactions.
Now, companies including exchange owner CME Group Inc, IEX Group Inc spinoff TradeWind Markets and financial technology firm Paxos are rolling out similar platforms to bring gold into the digital age.
Illustration: Yusha
About US$27 billion of gold changes hands every day in over-the-counter markets where settlements can sometimes takes days, leaving price risk for buyers and sellers.
Using blockchain promises more transparency, security and speedier deals. It also could attract new participants at a time when investors are souring on gold-backed exchange-trade funds (ETFs), a key source of growth in physical demand over the past decade.
“Digital gold would take market share away from other gold instruments: futures, physical gold bullion, gold ETFs,” JPMorgan Asset Management head of energy investing Ebele Kemerysaid in a telephone interview on Aug. 9.
Using the technology to trade the precious metal would create “another avenue for where investors can look to find value,” she said.
Bitcoin, the first instrument to use blockchain, has more than quadrupled this year to more than US$4,000. The cryptocurrency this year surpassed the price of gold for the first time.
CME Group, the world’s largest exchange owner, last year teamed up with the UK’s Royal Mint to create a bullion product called Royal Mint Gold (RMG).
CME, according to its Web site, worked with blockchain security company BitGo to provide a “fast, cost-effective and cryptographically secure method” of buying, holding and trading the precious metal.
The RMG trading platform is now being tested with major financial institutions and will be offered to customers by the end of the year, CME said.
That is in line with a timetable set in November last year, when the exchange first announced the plan. The product, which is geared toward institutional and retail investors, will be backed up by as much as US$1 billion of bullion stored at the mint, the exchange said.
TradeWind, backed by Sprott Inc, a money manager focused on precious metals, is using blockchain for an electronic platform that would match buyers with sellers of gold stored in any London Bullion Market Association-approved vault.
TradeWind also provides a distributed ledger that would handle trade settlement, account management and record-keeping.
The company expects to launch the product late this year or early next.
Paxos built Bankchain Precious Metals. It is a blockchain settlement service to allow for the instantaneous transfer of payments and ownership of the bullion stored in various vaults in London, chief executive officer Charles Cascarilla said in a telephone interview.
In a pilot test with Euroclear, before its partnership with Paxos was dissolved, Bankchain cleared more than 100,000 transactions with participants, including Citigroup Inc, Societe Generale SA, Barrick Gold Corp and INTL FCStone, according to a statement in April.
Paxos, which built the infrastructure, conducted another test, this time involving the actual movement of US dollars through the US Federal Reserve and the ownership of gold in London vaults, proving that the system is ready to process instantaneous settlements, Cascarilla said.
The service will be launched by the end of the year, as planned, even after breakup of Paxos’ partnership with Euroclear, he said.
Still, blockchains will not solve any problems related to the physical delivery of gold, BullionVault research director Adrian Ash said.
The company runs an online platform for retail trading of about US$2 billion of metal stored in vaults around the world, including Zurich, Switzerland, London, New York and Singapore.
It handles 38 tonnes of gold, more than the reserve holdings of Peru.
“People don’t trust the government, so why would you leave it at the government vaults?” Ash said. “Our customers don’t want it sitting in a commercial bank vault because they could go bankrupt. When we buy it from a bank, we put it in a specialist custodial facility. You need a truck to move it. Blockchain doesn’t solve the truck problem.”
Paxos’ settlement service might lure clients like Tornado Bullion, an online trading platform for coin dealers, metal recyclers and bullion buyers.
Tornado is tracking the progress of Bankchain, hopeful the technology could lower the transaction costs, cofounder Peter Thomas said in a telephone interview.
Tornado buys and sells gold over the counter through JPMorgan Chase & Co, one of the five clearing members of the London Bullion Market Association.
That way, same-day payments can be transferred to Tornado’s JPMorgan account in New York, Thomas said.
Settlements take longer for smaller players who do not deal directly with association clearing members.
Given the transaction takes a couple of days to be cleared and the gold delivered, Thomas said his clients use a hedging tool that costs US$0.10 for every ounce of gold to protect them against price fluctuations.
The metal on Thursday traded at about US$1,286.29 per ounce. Avoiding that cost on about US$500 million of trades every month would be useful, but Thomas says Tornado Bullion is not rushing to join the Paxos system.
“The biggest concern to me is reliability,” Thomas said. “The last thing I want to do is come in and find 700,000 ounces of gold are missing. We’ll give it a few years to see how it goes. Once accountability has been tested, then we’ll be a little more comfortable with it.”
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