
In brief
DTCC affirmed its vision for tokenized securities is interoperable.
DTCCโs Nadine Chakar underscored risk and costs as factors.
The company plans to issue tokens first on Canton Network.
The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporationโs vision for tokenized securities isnโt tethered to any single network, even if itโs admittedly rooted in the past.
The firm that processes roughly $10 trillion of securities transactions every day is keeping an open mind as it fleshes out its tokenized securities offering, but risk and data standards remain paramount, according to Global Head of DTCC Digital Assets Nadine Chakar.
During a virtual forum on Thursday, the Wall Street veteran said that DTCC values the concept of interoperability, and itโs not in the business of creating an environment where digital assets canโt flow seamlessly between blockchains due to technical limitations.
๏ปฟ
โWeโre not building walled gardens,โ Chakar said. โInteroperability, for me, is being able to move things seamlessly from one chain to another, without risk [or] extra expenses.โ
Chakar added that messaging standards facilitating communication within the traditional financial system may eventually become a โrelic of the past, but they will serve us well as we move forward into a world [where], every single day, youโve got somebody launching a new L1.โ
DTCC is committed to working with the industry on interoperability, Chakar affirmed, but her comments reflect the cautious nature of steps the incumbent is taking as it enters a space where North Korea has stolen billions of dollars through advanced cyberattacks.
Last month, DTCC signaled that it would first issue tokenized securities on Canton Network, a permissioned blockchain designed for financial institutions. Unlike networks that are purely transparent, user access to individual applications can be controlled. Whatโs more, the ability to validate transactions on the network is currently an invite-only process.
In some corners, DTCCโs vision for tokenized securities has generated controversy because the digital assets that it plans to issue arenโt โnative.โ Although some players in tokenization feel that securities should be issued directly on a blockchain to maximize efficiencies, DTCC plans to create tokens that are tied to existing securities it already safeguards.
In addition to Canton, DTCC plans to offer tokenized securities on โAppChain,โ a permissioned, Ethereum-compatible network for applications thatโs built on open-source technology.
โWhat DTCC is building in tokenized securities is intrinsically and inescapably a โwalled garden,โ because all โtokenized securitiesโ are simply claims on DTCCโs claims on the actual securities,โ crypto lawyer and MetaLeX founder Gabe Shapiro told Decrypt.
With the legal title to 83% of all publicly traded stock in the U.S. held by DTCC affiliate Cede & Co., Shapiro added, โYou donโt own the stock that is โtokenizedโโCede and DTCC do.โ
The sentiment may blister among crypto-natives, but Roger Bayston, head of digital assets at asset manager Franklin Templeton, which pioneered tokenized money market funds, recently told Decrypt that the โsecurities business is by construct permissioned.โ
During the virtual forum, Brian Steele, managing director and president of clearing and securities services at DTCC, explained why the firm considered Canton first. He cited demand from clients for after-hours financing to support transactions for market makers and liquidity.
Steele said itโs likely that each blockchain will have its own unique characteristics and ecosystem to make it fit-for-purpose, but DTCC will use evaluation criteria for future expansions including resiliency and security, while also factoring in client demand.
โWe want our clients to have a choice,โ he said. โWe are committed to connecting to multiple blockchains, assuming they meet the parameters of what I’ll call doing business with DTCC.โ
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