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Report says Blockchain could reduce infrastructure costs of banks by 30%

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Blockchain technology could reduce infrastructure costs for eight of the world’s 10 largest investment banks by an average of 30 percent, translating to USD$8 billion to USD$12 billion in annual cost savings for those banks, according to a new report by Accenture and McLagan which is part of Aon Hewitt, a business unit of Aon plc.

Blockchain is a type of database system that enables multiple parties to share access to the same data with a high level of confidence and security.

The findings of the report, “Banking on Blockchain: A Value Analysis for Investment Banks,” are based on an analysis of granular cost data from the eight banks, as aggregated by McLagan, a top benchmarking firm. Accenture’s insights on blockchain technology combined with McLagan’s data were applied to Accenture’s

High Performance Investment Bank
model to identify exactly where the value could be achieved.

“Capital markets institutions have faced a perfect storm of regulatory-compliance costs and revenue pressures in recent years, prompting them to invest in emerging technologies as a lever to improve profitability,” said Richard Lumb, Accenture’s group chief executive – Financial Services.

“Through this first-of-its-kind analysis of real-world cost data we draw a clearer line under blockchain’s value to investment banks. Our goal is to help banks move rapidly from proof-of-concept to production system with blockchain technology, generating real cost savings and improving bottom-line results.”

Need a clear roadmap

David Treat, managing director for Accenture’s financial services industry blockchain practice, said, “Given the tremendous cost of data reconciliation – which is part of every aspect of the capital markets industry – it’s no surprise that we’ve seen a significant amount of investment in blockchain technology. But, as with any emerging technology, understanding what these investments might yield is a challenge. As we move into production implementations, bank executives will need a clear roadmap for how and where to rethink their strategies and redesign their operating models, which is why we undertook this unique study.”

Today, investment banks maintain their own independent databases of transactions, customer information and other reference data. To complete any transaction, banks need to reconcile and confirm their data with their counterparties and clients which is a complex, costly, and labour-intensive process that is prone to error.

Blockchain technologies leverage advances in software, communications and encryption that will enable investment banks to move from maintaining a separate, fragmented database structure to a shared, distributed database that spans organizations.

Blockchain technology supports a shared digital ledger of transactions recorded and verified across a network of participants. With the technology, transactions reside in a tamper-evident data structure that provides the necessary levels of data security and access for each user.

By replacing traditionally fragmented database systems that support transaction processing with a distributed ledger system, banks can reduce or eliminate reconciliation costs, while improving data quality. 

According to the report, this would bring significant savings for many of banks’ core middle- and back-office processes.

For example: finance-reporting costs could shrink by 70 percent as a result of the optimized data quality, transparency and internal controls provided with a shared, single source of verified data.

Compliance costs could drop by 30 percent to 50 percent at the product level and on a centralized basis due to the improved transparency and auditability of transactions.

Centralized operations supporting functions such as “Know Your Customer” and client-onboarding could bring 50 percent savings by establishing more-efficient processes to manage digital identities and by “mutualizing” – or sharing – a single source of client data securely across multiple banks;

Business operations such as trade support, middle office, clearance, settlement and investigations could also lower their operating costs by 50 percent by reducing or eliminating the need for reconciliation, confirmation and trade-break analysis. 

“This joint analysis with Accenture suggests that blockchain technology could significantly change the cost structure of investment banks over the next decade,” said Chris Blain, partner at McLagan. “The technology represents a potentially important breakthrough at a time when leading investment banks are looking at myriad ways to rebuild their returns on equity.”


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