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Driving enterprise DeFi adoption through tokenization

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Decentralized finance has quickly risen to prominence, largely driven by the fact that there is over $11 billion of total value locked in the sector. While it makes sense that DeFi — a space characterized by terms such as “yield farming” and “meme tokens” — has captured the majority of the cryptocurrency sector’s attention, the concept is also beginning to catch on within the enterprise world. 

Stefan Schmidt, chief technology officer of Unibright — an enterprise blockchain development company — told Cointelegraph that DeFi concepts can be applied within the enterprise sector where financial assets can be represented by programmable tokens: “In general, the definition of DeFi still isn’t clear outside of the enterprise sector.” However, according to him, DeFi is “Anything finance related that can be tokenized.”

2021 to become the year of enterprise DeFi?

Although enterprise DeFi is still in development, Schmidt mentioned that this will start gaining traction very soon, as these concepts will be implemented within enterprise IT tech stacks in 2021.

In the meantime, the first step that will set the stage for enterprise DeFi will be facilitating agreements between organizations sharing data. Specifically, these agreements will show that all invoices and other financial transactions are valid and should be processed for payment. “If you don’t have a trusted agreement between all parties showing that invoices are valid and should be paid, you can’t move forward in the DeFi space,” said Schmidt.

To enable one possible use case, enterprise blockchain development company Provide has partnered with Unibright in a joint venture. Beginning Oct. 20, Unibright will operate entirely under Provide as both companies aim to unify the technology enterprises require to safely synchronize data.

The two companies have been closely collaborating for a year already to help enterprises implement the Baseline Protocol, an OASIS open-source initiative that typically uses the Ethereum mainnet as a type of middleware to serve as a single source of truth for organizations sharing data. Coke One North America was the first publicly announced use case, demonstrating how the Baseline Protocol is allowing the bottling giant to tokenize invoices across its supply chain.

Kyle Thomas, CEO of Provide, told Cointelegraph that the Baseline Protocol is indeed the lynchpin that will facilitate the age of corporate data-sharing to enable enterprise DeFi. “The ability to seamlessly coordinate business processes such as purchasing and supply chain movements between trading partners is a game changer for global business,” he remarked.

Incorporating DeFi concepts into the enterprise

Thomas further noted that a joint venture between Unibright and Provide seeks to drive an end-to-end baseline as a service offering. This will include consulting enterprises that are interested in incorporating the Baseline Protocol into their existing enterprise resource planning systems. “When this implementation is understood, enterprise ecosystems can be set up in a non-centralized way, where every participant is running their own compliant IT tech stack,” he said.

The adoption of the Unibright framework will allow Provide to extend its Unibright Token (UBT) model for the upcoming launch of Provide Payments. According to Schmidt, Provide Payments will use UBT tokens to provide liquidity for its managed transaction service. This service will initially support paying gas fees for arbitrary transactions broadcast to a public blockchain network, like Ethereum. Customers will then be billed based on transaction volume.

Provide Payments will seek to enable traditional enterprise procurement of public blockchain services without the need for customers to ever buy or hold cryptocurrency. “All of Unibright’s DeFi offerings will be customized for enterprise needs,” said Marten Jung, CEO of Unibright. “This combined offering paves the way to blockchain-based corporate data sharing.”

Tokenized standards will soon follow

Yet in order for a baseline-as-a-service offering to come to fruition, token standards around purchase orders or invoices must still be developed. Paul Brody, global innovation lead for blockchain at Ernst & Young, told Cointelegraph that eventually there will be an evolution where enterprise users will follow the path of consumers, adding: “They will start with coordination of business agreements, but they will then add payments. As the privacy tools from Baseline Protocol get more widespread usage, I think we will then see the adoption of DeFi by enterprises.”

Brody further mentioned that early enterprise DeFi use cases will be represented by enterprises selling financial assets such as receivables to third parties in bidding models. However, he noted that the risk-averse nature of enterprises means that adoption will occur further down the road.

Moreover, Unibright’s Jung shared that, from a customer perspective, many of the challenges expressed relate to the ease of use for a tech stack operating with the Baseline Protocol, along with the costs of ownership. Jung mentioned that transaction costs should go down in the coming years, yet this is tough to predict when using blockchain as a middleware to serve as a single source of truth. Data privacy standards and permissioned data are also challenges that need to be overcome in order for enterprises to start preparing to adopt DeFi techniques.

Interestingly, while Ethereum 2.0 has also been predicted to drive enterprise DeFi, both Thomas and Schmidt think that it will not have a significant impact on the progress of the Baseline Protocol. According to Schmidt:

“We are not restricted by Ethereum limitations since the Baseline Protocol is blockchain agnostic. But if a company wants to baseline a process using the Ethereum network, ETH 2.0 may help a bit if the throughput of the network goes up to alleviate the need for a layer 2 solution.”



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The new ‘Bank of England’ is ‘no bank at all’

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As one of the first countries to industrialize in the 1760s, Britain’s manufacturing revolution instigated one of the greatest practical and ubiquitous changes in human history. But even more extraordinary than the cultural shift itself, is the fact that Britain’s industrialization remained way ahead of potential competition for decades. Only in the early 1900s did historians come to grips with the issues of causation. Max Weber’s pithy answer, “the Protestant work ethic,” pointed to Puritan seriousness, diligence, fiscal prudence and hard work. Others point to the establishment of the Bank of England in 1694 as a foundation for financial stability.

In contrast, continental Europe lurched from one national debt crisis to another, then threw itself headlong into the Napoleonic wars. Unsurprisingly, it was not until after 1815 that industrialization took place on the European mainland, where it was spearheaded by the new country of Belgium.

250 years later, another revolution has begun with the launch of Bitcoin (BTC), but this one is more commercial in nature than industrial. Though the full impact has yet to play out, the parallels between these two historical events are already striking.

Bitcoin may not match the obviousness of industrialization, but the underlying pragmatics touch on the very foundations of the non-barter economy. Like the establishment of the Bank of England, the creation of the cryptocurrency infrastructure has been prompted by ongoing and worsening threats to financial stability: systemic fault-lines created by macroeconomic challenges stemming from the 2008 financial crisis.

If you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em…right?

Where a central bank once anchored financial enlightenment, it now plays the role of antagonist. For those who could “connect the dots” in 2008, there was the realization that central banks no longer existed as guardians and protectors of national currencies, but rather as tools for creating politicized market distortions, abandoning their duty to preserve wealth in favor of creating the conditions for limitless, cheap government debt. While many of the underlying intentions were benign, the process inherently worked to punish savers and reward reckless debt.

Meanwhile, it has steadily taken time for the potential of digital assets to reach their potential and approach something like critical mass, though thankfully full acceptance shouldn’t take as long as Britain’s industrial revolution. Over the past 12 years, cryptocurrencies have moved from unknown to novel to significant, growing interest. As a result, profound changes are underway, affecting the mechanics by which investors, the investment industry, wealth managers and even the commercial banking sector are engaging with cryptocurrencies.

This interest has accelerated as we enter into a period of deep economic uncertainty and growing awareness that structural soundness is shifting away from traditional investment options. Not only that, this growing financial innovation and public interest has largely occurred outside of the central banks’ control, if not outright antagonism led by the banks’ regulatory arms in government.

Now, many central banks are trying to join a game they’ve tried almost every way of beating, with digital currencies that adopt the glowing sheen of crypto innovation, but which also eschew the underlying innovations and philosophy that made those innovations so popular to begin with.

Follow or get out of the way

The popularity of cryptocurrency has largely been due to its protean fungibility — it has been whatever the independent financial community has needed it to be, from digital currency to speculative financial instruments to smart contracts that can power smart financial technology.

However hard central banks might try to co-opt the hype of cryptocurrency, cryptocurrency succeeding will mark the fundamental end of critical aspects of the central banking monopoly by offering a more competitive vehicle for facilitating commercial transactions and providing a more stable medium to store monetized assets. Cryptocurrencies actually offer real returns on “cash” deposits, something that the fiat banking system has long since abandoned. Most of all, cryptocurrencies reveal the fictitious nature of fiat currencies as a principle.

Cryptocurrencies as an ecosystem will increasingly constrain, redirect and set the parameters for government macroeconomic policies. Certainly, sound alternatives to fiat currencies will drive the latter to the periphery of commercial life, concomitantly reducing the number of tools the nation-state has at its disposal to regulate or respond to changing economic conditions. Above all, this means that government financial engagement can no longer be a rule unto itself. It will have to engage by the same principles as everyone else. A level playing field here has dramatic implications.

Against the backdrop of the essential limits of fiat currencies, current geo- and macroeconomic policies and a new emerging world order, cryptocurrencies offer vast potential as an efficiency facilitating frictionless commerce and investment, a medium of stability against uncertainty and inflation, increased security in value transfer and wealth management, optimum autonomy in an increasingly intrusive climate, and “cash” asset preservation/growth in a world of negative interest rates.

The edifice that supports the concept of a “global reserve currency” is also weakening. This will reduce political influence over global finance, as well as nations’ abilities to run a long-term balance of payments deficits, current account deficits and borrow at little or no interest. Indeed, given current trends, changes in trading mechanics may speedily evolve to the point that such “reserve currencies” no longer have a function at all. And cryptocurrency success will hasten the end of the U.S. dollar monopoly in global commerce.

The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

James Gillingham is the CEO and a co-founder of Finxflo. James is engaged in developing and implementing strategic plans and company policies, maintaining an open dialogue with stakeholders and driving organizational success. He is an expert in managing and executing high-level strategic objectives with more than 13 years’ experience in building, developing and expanding multinational organizations. His deep knowledge of financial markets, digital currencies and fintech has played a pivotal role in his success to date.