DF: What some people like about crypto is the freedom to exchange and the lack of regulation, but this is actually getting in the way of its maturity. The idea of crypto as an easily exchangeable, transactionable currency that you can use to buy a loaf of bread will require a level of regulation. Tokenizing ETFs or assets, for example, is conceptually fine, but for it to become mainstream there will need to be a foundation of regulation and plumbing that are currently available in the traditional world.
LH: There definitely needs to be better rules and regulations around how these systems get established. How do you observe and regulate all the activities done on-chain or with this technology to make sure everything is transacting properly? How do you get native liquidity within these platforms? What kind of cybersecurity and technology challenges do you have to think through from an investor protection perspective? I’m not sure that last point has been pressure tested, and we’ve seen some successful fraudulent and phishing activity in the on-chain world.
It's difficult to picture an environment without the institutions and regulations governing all of this. They exist for good reasons, and those reasons don’t go away because the underlying technology changes.
DF: A huge part of it is also how the existing platforms embrace the technology. The traditional gatekeepers, wealth platforms and independent financial advisors need to adopt this technology because they’re the interface. The demand exists, but it’s a question of how quickly they can build the operational infrastructure.
LH: And it’s not clear at this point who wins. Right now, you can only trade a limited number of things in a wallet, whereas in my share dealing account I can trade pretty much anything. This will probably include digital assets in the near future, so there might be a situation where the wallet providers’ technology wins, but the incumbents are actually in the better positions to capitalize on that.
As an asset manager, we want to deliver our investment products and strategies in whatever form the clients want it, whether that’s a mutual fund or a digitally native representative of an asset. The underlying decision-making isn’t necessarily affected, because it’s still a portfolio manager making allocation decisions. But we need to be able to manage and leverage this digital ecosystem in a different space than our traditional platform, because it’s what our investors care about.
It’s through the strength of these frameworks that you’ll see mass adoption and confidence that will enable this technology to thrive.