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UBS: Banks Could 'Absorb the Benefits' of Bitcoin

UBS: Banks Could 'Absorb the Benefits' of Bitcoin

UBS: Banks Could 'Absorb the Benefits' of Bitcoin

In a new report, UBS indicated it sees bitcoin's technology as capable of reducing financial costs while improving security.

In a new report, UBS indicated it sees bitcoin's technology as capable of reducing financial costs while improving security.

In a new report, UBS indicated it sees bitcoin's technology as capable of reducing financial costs while improving security.

AccessTimeIconMar 28, 2014, 2:46 PM
Updated Sep 3, 2021, 11:13 AM

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Global financial services firm UBS, a leading provider of retail and commercial banking services, released an extensive report on 28th March that weighed in on bitcoin's potential to disrupt the existing financial system.

Entitled 'Bitcoins and Banks', the report concluded that bitcoin is not just a 'problematic currency' – though this garnered a mention in the headline, but more interestingly, a technology that could bring widespread benefits if co-opted by the traditional banking system.

The 31-page write-up suggested that bitcoin, as a currency or an alternative to traditional banking, poses little threat to traditional institutions, but that the underlying technology could be used to improve global payment systems provided the right business incentives could be identified.

Wrote UBS:

"Setting aside its political agenda, we see Bitcoin as having some potential as a new transaction technology, where a bitcoin-like technology could provide a basis for a new shared payments and transfer system using existing currencies and securities. Such a system could reduce systemic costs, and provide faster, secure, transfers – particularly in the international arena."

Though it was careful to describe such hypotheticals as "blue-sky ideas", the bank noted that the distributed block chain "offers a robust and secure way of storing consumer funds", and that current issues such as the computational intensity bitcoin requires are merely "quirks" inherent in the first implementations that could later be improved.

Further, it suggested that banks could benefit from realizing the technological implications of bitcoin:

"Rather than trying to develop a completely new financial system as Bitcoin is trying to do, it makes more sense that banks, as existing money managers, absorb the benefits of the technological innovation."

Bitcoin technology has bright future

UBS noted that the block chain could just as easily use existing fiat currencies, and that such a system "offers a radical opportunity to drastically reduce duplication in the existing system".

It even went so far as to offer an example of what this reimagined financial system would look like, describing a system whereby banks across the world maintained a ledger that kept track of public addresses and balances.

Wrote UBS:

"Customers have control of their private keys, possibly with the option of authorizing their banks to handle their keys for them as well, while keeping the customer front-end broadly similar (i.e. with bank account numbers, etc)."

Derivatives and swaps could be attractive for banks

The report found bitcoin the currency most appealing for banks when used as an investment service, similar to an ETF, mentioning specifically the model suggested by the Winklevoss Bitcoin Trust.

In these instances, the authors noted that banks would not have to expose themselves to market risk, money laundering or other potential negatives.

Bitcoin derivatives, it said, could prove attractive, provided banks were allowed to legally participate in this sector. Further, the report stated that this could help reduce bitcoin's volatility, while providing banks a source of fee revenue.

It seemed to suggested that this avenue would likely be one of the next ways the traditional financial system could look to safely explore alternative currencies and their market implications.

Credit card fees are more at risk

UBS suggested that the bigger risk was that a third party set up a "bitcoin-like payment system" that threatens to bring down credit card and money wire fees.

The report noted that cross-border transfers take days, whereas with the bitcoin block chain, they can take minutes. Further, it noted that bitcoin the technology has implemented security improvements that traditional service providers would need to adjust to.

"On a national level, a bitcoin-like system could enhance security and reduce fraud on an everyday level. In the US in particular, credit cards are regularly used for everyday transactions for convenience – but this leaves both the merchant and the banks open to risks of chargebacks."

Banks, it noted, could adapt these advantages of the bitcoin system, but that they may be hesitant to do so as it would cannibalize current revenue.

"A possible incentive for banks to develop such a system would be increased money transfer volumes sufficient to offset decreased fees, or if costs are lowered enough to still boost profits, but any such projection would be highly speculative at this stage."

Merchant acceptance has little appeal

UBS also took on the question of whether bitcoin the currency represents any cost savings for merchants. To tackle this question, it looked at the daily fees paid out to miners as a percentage of transaction volume, noting it has fluctuated over the last 15 months.

During this study period, it indicated that the 30-day moving average for these costs was 4%, though this excludes the added 1% fee merchants would need to pay to convert money to fiat.

"While these figures are more or less in line with credit card fees (which range from 1% to 3%), since the beginning of 2014, the rate has trended upwards and been significantly more volatile – peaking at 8.3% at the beginning of February."

Notably, the report, as many other recent attempts on the subject, doesn't take into account the services of companies like BitPay and Coinbase which handle such transactions directly; nor did it mention the success being enjoyed by early adopters such as Overstock and TigerDirect.

Disintermediation risk is low

Still, while UBS believes bitcoin the technology is promising, bitcoin the currency was given a thorough critique. In particular, UBS indicated that bitcoin "exists in a regulatory vacuum", which is damaging to its global trust.

UBS indicated that smaller, local banks, particularly in emerging markets and countries with high economic turmoil faced the biggest threat from bitcoin the currency, but that economic turmoil is already a threat to traditional banking services, even without bitcoin.

Said UBS:

"Without these stress factors, we see little threat from bitcoin."

UBS noted that even those who used bitcoin the currency for transactions would likely require banking services such as deposits and lending from traditional outlets. It predicted that in the face of this pressure, either bitcoin would fail, or a bitcoin bank would emerge, which it suggested may be counterintuitive to its goal.

Still, the report noted that among certain groups, such as China (with its strict capital controls) and among libertarian thinkers, the bitcoin's pros could outweigh the cons. Such examples were noted as part of a larger, three-part section that analyzed bitcoin as a store of value, means of exchange and unit of account.

Image credit: Pincasso / Shutterstock.com

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