Share these talks and lectures with your colleagues
Invite colleaguesWill tokenisation deliver efficiency? And what kind?
Abstract
This paper attempts to provide a careful and balanced look at some of the benefits and challenges of tokenisation of securities. A fundamental problem is the lack of consistency in how ‘tokenisation’ should be defined. According to a report by McKinsey & Company in 2023, ‘Tokenization adoption was poised for success six years ago, but progress was limited … the path could be different this time’. In the past, tokenisation was: (1) limited to a process of creating a representation of financial, intellectual or physical assets on a blockchain (ie distributed ledger technology [DLT]); and (2) discussed as a narrative of disintermediation and programmability as a basis for efficiency gains. As it became clear that DLT, with its basic game-theoretical approach, comes with high costs and opaque governance, traditional platforms with high efficiency such as the European TARGET2-Security (T2S) with atomic settlement and delivery-versus-payment (DvP) show up as blueprints for efficiency. A proposal of the Bank for International Settlement (BIS) for a unified ledger, Project Guardian of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), both in 2023, and an announcement of the U.S. Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA) in 2024 about ‘settlement on a common regulated venue … [of] tokenized assets’ can be regarded as paradigms for a new and pragmatic approach, with coordination and synchronisation as key objectives in the context of financial market infrastructures.
The full article is available to subscribers to the journal.
Author's Biography
Udo Milkau is a ‘digital dinosaur’ with his first experience in digital technology in 1974, innovation projects including the first European securities online brokerage in 1995, and working as a digital counsellor. For three decades he held management positions within the automotive industry, professional services companies and transaction banking, served customers in Asia and Europe, the European banking industry, and was Chief Digital Officer, Transaction Banking until 2020. After his academic education in physics, he worked as a research scientist in large collaborations at different European research centres including CERN, CEA de Saclay and GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung. He was chairman of the European Association of Co-operative Banks (EACB) Digital and Data Working Group, a member of the EACB Payment Services Working Group and a member of the European Central Bank’s Operation Managers Group (ECB OMG). Udo has published more than 120 papers encompassing payments/transaction banking, risk management/risk culture, digitalisation of banking, blockchain technology and artificial intelligence and has published four books. He has previously lectured at Goethe University Frankfurt am Main and Frankfurt School of Finance and Management, and currently at Baden-Württemberg Cooperative State University (DHBW in Mosbach).