May 4th – May 10th
PERSPECTIVES by Eric F. Risley
Quite a week: the annual Consensus event, the largest crypto M&A deal in history, and three other M&A transactions signaling the future direction of crypto.
The melding of crypto and traditional financial services continues. The most notable example to date is Bullish’s acquisition of Equiniti. Bullish CEO and former NYSE President Tom Farley is delivering on a vision informed by his direct experience with the evolution of traditional capital markets. Over the course of his career, capital markets transitioned from paper to electronic trading. Today, programmable representations of assets, called tokens, and a single source of ownership, a shared ledger called a blockchain, are beginning to reshape capital markets again.
The rebuilding of capital markets infrastructure has begun, allowing financial assets to be instantly traded, monitored (for example, collateral levels), serviced (for example, paying a dividend or interest payment, or executing a stock split), kept compliant (for example, transfer restrictions), and, perhaps surprisingly to some, used to determine ownership. These capabilities allow for significant efficiency improvements and cost reductions, while more importantly unlocking the potential for new types of securities and a truly global capital market. As most of you know, this is the tokenization theme we have long discussed, now becoming real. See more in our M&A Alert on the transaction.
Payments are similarly in the early stages of replumbing. The payment asset is simply a digital form of fiat currency, now known by the poorly named term “stablecoin,” and a shared ledger called a blockchain serves as the single source of truth for ownership. Instant, global transfer of value, in other words, a payment, is the benefit. This week, Payward, Kraken’s parent company, continued its aggressive M&A efforts with the acquisition of Reap. More in our M&A Alert.
The future is the continued bridging of crypto and traditional financial services. Within the next half decade, it will become increasingly hard to differentiate between the two.