1) The document discusses a project by the OECD to analyze the implications of proliferating tokenization of assets for financial markets. It aims to understand benefits and challenges, disruptive effects, and policy implications.
2) Tokenization refers to using blockchain or distributed ledger technology to issue tokens representing ownership of real-world assets. This could streamline clearing and settlement by reducing intermediaries.
3) Tokenization may improve liquidity for illiquid assets and increase retail access but also risks market fragmentation and gaps in regulation. Policymakers should address potential issues and facilitate standardization where tokenization provides clear benefits.
ECOSOC YOUTH FORUM 2024 - Side Events Schedule -17 April.
Tokenisation of Assets Report Summary
1. MAIN FINDINGS
17 January 2020
The Tokenisation of Assets
and Potential Implications
for Financial Markets
2. 2
OECD project on Tokenisation of assets
Tokens first discussed by the OECD Committee
on Financial Markets in 2018
Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs) for SME Financing
Background
Objective:
Analyse implications of a possible proliferation of tokenisation for
(parts of) the financial markets
• Understand benefits and challenges to its wider adoption
• Discuss potential disruptive effects on markets
• Anticipate possible perils linked to its wider use
• Discuss policy implications
• Provide case studies of practical applications
Central bank digital currencies/ stablecoins are excluded from scope
4. What do we mean by Tokenisation? 1/3
4
Pre-existing
real assets
Tokens representing
the economic value
and rights of assets
BLOCKCHAIN
VAULT /
CUSTODY
5. What do we mean by Tokenisation? 2/3
5
BLOCKCHAIN
Issuer Investors
Rights (ownership,
coupons)
Tokenised
Securities
6. What do we mean by Tokenisation? 3/3
6
Exist and trade both “on-chain” and
“off-chain”
Types of assets
- Financial assets: any
conventional security transferred
on DLT
- Non-financial assets (e.g. real
estate, art)
- Commodities (e.g. gold)
- In Theory: everything
Backed by real assets existing
outside the ledger
Tokens representing a pre-existing
real asset
Tokens “native” to the blockchain
Exist and trade exclusively “on-
chain”
Financial assets: issued on DLTs
- Debt securities (easier as
bearer instruments)
- Equity securities
- STOs the regulatory
compliant successor of
ICOs?
Defined by their existence on the
ledger
- Independent of conventional
part of the markets
Tokenised vs. Securitised (ABS) Tokenised vs. Dematerialised
7. Tokenisation: benefits and challenges
7
TOKENI
SATION
Transparency
(e.g. record of
beneficial
ownership)
Real-time
Clearing &
Settlement
Fractional
ownership
Lower
illiquidity
premia
Increased
retail
access
Relatively
clear
regulation
Potential
Speed &
Cost
efficiencies
Increased
liquidity for
illiquid assets
e.g. SME risk
Risk of
bifurcation of
markets
?
Gaps in legal
/ regulatory
framework?
Arbitrage
opportunities
?
Risks
inherent in
DLTs
(scalability,
governance,
operational)
Issues
around
digital
identity
AML/CFT
8. If it’s so good, why hasn’t it taken off
already?
8
Business
Rationale
Technical
feasibility
Economic sense
Does the application of DLTs
provide important
advantages, when compared
to the current technology
applied?
Technical issues around
scalability, interoperability,
privacy, settlement finality
Is there a proven and
measurable economic
rationale for the use of DLTs:
- Measurable efficiencies
and cost reductions
- Positive NPV of the
investment to transition
All three conditions need to be satisfied
for transition to DLT to be meaningful
Is there a solid business
rationale for the use of DLTs?
- Efficiency gains,
transparency
- Deficiencies in safety and/or
trust
- Disintermediation potential
Tokenised markets as a complement to conventional, for niche markets
(e.g. SME equity and debt funding)
Transition deployed in a gradual manner (complement to conventional,
and for parts of the asset lifecycle – e.g. clearing & settlement)
10. Implications for financial markets:
I/ Trading & pricing
7
= Disintermediation
Shift away from
market-making
model
• Increase in volatility ?
• Constraint liquidity ?
Faster and
cheaper repo &
securities lending
• Faster unwinding of collateral
• Improved collateral fluidity improved liquidity
BUT no netting possible each transaction needs to be fully
funded and settled moving of higher volume of collateral
• Cheaper repo & securities lending lower capital intensity
more efficient use of balance sheet
24/7 trading 365
on multiple
networks and
exchanges
• Fragmentation ?
• Delinking of token price
from underlying?
• Arbitrage opportunities ?
11. Implications for financial markets:
II/ Liquidity
11
Bifurcation of liquidity for
assets traded both on-chain
and off-chain
• Shift of liquidity from traditional
markets to the blockchain?
drying out of liquidity off-chain ?
• Interoperability ?
• Payment leg and adequate funding
• Risks of liquidity mismatch, especially
when investors have limited
understanding of underlying assets
(similar to structured products)
Improved liquidity for
illiquid asset classes
• Provide liquidity to near-illiquid
assets (e.g. SME securities, private
placements, PE/VC funds)
• Eliminate illiquidity premium
more value captured by investors ?
12. Implications for financial markets:
III/ Clearing and settlement (1/2)
Issuer
Broker(sell-side)/
Nominee account
Paying
Agent
Legal
ownership
Beneficial
ownership
Registar
InvestorsCustodian
Segregated
client
accounts
Beneficial
ownership
Record of assets
held for clients
Record of cash
held for clients
12
13. Implications for financial markets:
III/ Clearing and settlement (2/2)
Issuer Investors
Custodian
Recording of
transactions on the
distributed ledger
Legal and beneficial
ownership allocated
on the blockchain
Custodian ensuring
connection of distributed
ledger with off-chain world
Blockchain
acting as
registar
On-chain
clearing and
settlement
Smart contracts
replacing
paying agents
Reduced number of intermediaries streamlined, cheaper process
Faster data reconciliation Shortening of settlement cycle
lower exposure to counterparty risks
reduced asset encumbrance for assets pledged as collateral for margin
13
14. 14
Importance of trusted central authority (custodians?)
Make the connection between the off-chain and on-chain worlds
Guarantee asset characteristics and ownership before transition
Custody of assets being tokenised (when not native)
Custody of private keys (when native)
The need for a central authority in a
decentralised world
DLTs in financial markets does not eliminate need for central parties
Contrary to the most basic fundamental of DLTs
Complete decentralisation is neither realistic nor desirable
Risks of misconduct by ‘bad-actor’ central authority/custodian
Need for appropriate regulation and supervision
15. 15
Tokenised form of central bank digital currency or stablecoins necessary
for the payment leg of security settlement:
To achieve near real-time settlement
For Delivery vs. Payment (DvP) to be certain and instantaneous
(securities and payment switch ownership instantaneously)
To avoid lengthy processing times or costly fees of off-chain payment
systems
For asset servicing and corporate actions (e.g. dividends)
A necessity for tokenised central bank currency
or stablecoins in tokenised securities
Proof-of-concept projects/sandboxes use Central Bank tokenised cash
Project Ubin: Tokenised Singapore Dollar
Project Jasper: Cash tokens issued by the Bank of Canada,
representing a claim on Canadian dollar deposits held in CB accounts
Privately-run platforms offering tokenisation services use stablecoins
17. 17
Tokenisation meaningful only in markets where:
Measurable efficiency gains to be reaped OR deficiency of trust
Adoption more likely for illiquid assets in niche small markets
SME financing (private placements of non-listed securities/other SME
securities); PE/VC and other funds; real estate
Implications for policymakers (1/2):
Evolution of the market
Tokenisation as a complement to conventional processes rather than
replacement of markets
Possible gradual convergence to hybrid version (DLT-based applications
on top of traditional infrastructure)
Where efficiency gains are high enough to justify the (gradual) transition
to a DLT infrastructure, investment requirements
Standardisation in the protocols and coordination between market
participants can enable quicker adoption of DLT-based technologies
Role of policymakers to facilitate coordination (local and international)
in areas where the application of DLTs has proven to be meaningful and
beneficial
18. Implications for policymakers (2/2):
Regulatory environment
18
Tokenisation merely replacing one digital technology with another:
Cryptography-enabled dematerialised securities based on a DLT-
enabled networks, instead of electronic book-entries in securities
registries of CSD
Nothing new for jurisdictions with tech-neutral approach to regulation
BUT difficult to know with certainty whether tokenisation is fully captured
by the regulatory perimeter –> identify & address potential GAPS
Existing regulation may need to apply to new actors
New requirements may be needed to be added (e.g. interoperability
between DLs/ interaction or gateways linking on- and off-chain)
New risks that may arise from new actors (consumer protection and
market conduct) & application of DLT tech (market integrity; operational)
AND Tokenised assets that fall within the perimeter of existing frameworks
may not be fully and correctly understood by market participants
Need for analysis and greater clarity by policymakers