After blockchain test in space, JPMorgan offers solution to improve global funds transfers between banks

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The new solution will lead to lowering costs for both the sending and receiving banks.

Weeks after experimenting with blockchain-based payments between satellites in space to see if two machines could transact autonomously, investment bank JPMorgan is now using blockchain technology to improve funds transfers between banking institutions globally. JPMorgan has now launched a new solution called Confirm to help bring down the number of “rejected or returned transactions caused by mismatched payment details,” according to the investment banking company. As a result, the solution will lead to lowering costs for both the sending and receiving banks.

“JPMorgan getting into blockchain is going to help a lot on the institutional side of fund transfers. It is looking to resolve the clearing and settlement problem which happens in the bank-to-bank transfers and takes multiple days to settle. With blockchain, JPMorgan and banks will be able to settle it in near real-time,” Ashish Agarwal, a blockchain expert and Founder of PayO — neo banking platform for SMEs – told Financial Express Online.

Confirm is a global account information validation application on JPMorgan’s blockchain network through which partner banking institutions, according to the company, will be able to request confirmation of the beneficiary account information and receive responses directly from other participating banks receiving the requests in near-real-time. Once the information is validated, the payment may be sent through JPMorgan’s clearing solution PayDirect to route the payment. The investment bank is working with 12 Taiwan banks for testing the use of blockchain technology to improve global funds transfers. JPMorgan had in February this year, according to a news report, partnered with State Bank of India to speed up overseas transactions for customers through the bank’s blockchain technology.

Also read: Zoho’s Sridhar Vembu gives growth mantra to SMBs; suggests entrepreneurs to focus on rural India

Last month, Visa had announced the use of cryptocurrency USD Coin — a stablecoin, which means its value is pegged directly to the US dollar — to settle transactions on its payment network on a pilot basis. Apart from Visa, institutions, and entrepreneurs including Mastercard, BlackRock, PayPal, Square, Tesla’s Elon Musk, Jack Dorsey, and more having been either engaging or dabbling with cryptocurrencies. PayPal had also last month announced that its US customers will be able to convert their Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, or Bitcoin Cash to US dollars to complete the transaction.

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Credit Suisse says it faces a ‘significant loss’

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Swiss bank Credit Suisse said Monday that it may face a “highly significant” loss resulting from a default by a US-based hedge fund on margin calls that it and other banks made last week.

In a brief statement, Credit Suisse didn’t identify the “significant” hedge fund or the other banks affected, or give other details of what happened.

“Following the failure of the fund to meet these margin commitments, Credit Suisse and a number of other banks are in the process of exiting these positions,” the company said.

“While at this time it is premature to quantify the exact size of the loss resulting from this exit, it could be highly significant and material to our first-quarter results, notwithstanding the positive trends announced in our trading statement earlier this month,” it added. Credit Suisse said that it plans to issue an update “in due course.” A margin call is triggered when investors borrow using their stock portfolio as collateral and have to make up the balance required by banks when the share prices fall and the collateral is worth less.

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GameStop saga: What happened and what are its implications

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How has GameStop been faring?

GME is the world’s largest video game omni channel retailer. However its business has been shrinking (8 per cent CAGR decline in revenue for last 4 years till FY20 ) due to the structural shift to online gaming. .

In the opinion of most professional investors, its business was expected to remain till gaming consoles required discs, but hardly few doubted it was in a terminal decline. Shorting the stock worked well for a long time with the share price declining by close to 90 per cent in 5 years till December 2019.

What triggered interest in this stock?

Enter Wall Street Bets (WSB) – a stock markets discussion forum for retail investors in the social networking website Reddit.

Views on why there might be value in GME despite its business challenges started emerging sometime in the forum in 2019.

While initially it did not have much impact, it gained momentum during the pandemic induced lockdown which triggered a surge in retail participation in stocks.

Further, from initially starting as opinion on the stock, the discussion forum took on an agenda of fighting ‘establishments/elites’ (Wall Street Elites/Institutions), who in their view were resposible for past crisis’ like the finanical crisis of 2007.

Why did the stock price move up so much in short-term?

For a stock price to move up in the short term, facts and fundamentals do not matter. All it requires is demand exceeding supply. And when you have a big group of energetic angry, young retail investors in a frenzy, you get a demand surge as they buy shares and call options on the shares. And when there is a demand surge, the algo and momentum traders join the party.

Add to it Elon Musk’s tweets of support to the retail investors, and you get a high voltage electric charge. Force equals mass (buyers) * acceleration (frenzy). So by Jan 21, what started as a discussion on the stock couple of years ago, had developed into a unstoppable force, with GME appreciating from a price of $18 on December 31, 2020 to a high of $483 on January 28, 2021, a mind boggling 2583 per cent rise.

What is the implication of this event for hedge funds?

The establishment that had profited from shorting GME over the years came under threat. They stood no chance in the fight, and in fact would have added further momentum to the surge by covering their shorts. For instance, Citron Research, one of the popular hedge funds/short sellers , was forced to cover its GME shorts at a 100 per cent loss.

The ironical truth is that in their zeal to target elites, the retail investors targeted short sellers who in many cases are actually anti-establishment themselves. Short sellers, besides targeting over valued companies, attempt to identify fraudulent companies. Whether it was the Enron and WorldCom scams, or the sub-prime crisis of 2007, it is the short sellers who identified these early. While some Wall Street elites own hedge funds that short markets, to classify entire gamut of short sellers as elites is misplaced. Many have a successful track record of identifying fraudulent companies.

The best example in recent memory is Wirecard – identified by short sellers like Jim Chanos of Kynikos Associates in 2019. This was when Wirecard was regarded as one of Germany’s best companies and was part of its leading DAX Index (like India’s Sensex). Subsequently Wirecard admitted to fraud and filed for insolvency in 2020.

What is the implication on individual investors?

Reports in the public domain suggest that Indian retail investors also joined the frenzy invested in GameStop in the last few days. Investors need to note that absolutely nothing has changed in the fundamentals of GME. Its business still faces severe challenges and is still in terminal decline. Just investor belief that it is worth more, does not create any real value and the stock will likely crash once this frenzy ends.

What is the implication on markets?

While Indian markets will not see such levels of short squeeze given the rules that prevent naked short-selling and circuit filters, this event still has other implications on markets across the world. .

It has proven that trading cannot be done the same way going forward. Whether short sellers or Wall Street elites or brokers, market participants need to acknowledge what technology and social media have done and can do to trading and investing. Democratization of investing has happened, driven by technology, and institutional trading strategies will have to evolve to factor this. Retail investors are now a dominant force in markets and not the ‘dumb money’ they were considered as before.

In the process, the angry, young millennials of WSB Reddit forum have delivered the perfect ode to Aaron Swartz. A child prodigy, he was a co-founder of Reddit and dedicated his life to democratisation of information, fighting the elites till his untimely death at the age of 26 in 2013. They have successfully proven the power of democratisation.

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