The hype surrounding blockchain technology will recede sharply in 2018 as the cost and complexity of implementing blockchain solutions becomes apparent says GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company. Many of the early blockchain projects will either be quietly shelved in favour of more traditional approaches or they will evolve in a way which reduces their dependence on blockchain technology.
GlobalData's Thematic Research report, ‘Blockchain – Thematic Research’, reveals that while the market is awash with absurd claims about the benefits of blockchain technology, there are some key domains where the ability to execute distributed transactions without relying on a single central authority will bring significant value. While blockchain technology will have lost much of its gloss by 2025, it will have found its way into the heart of many key business processes; especially those involving multiple, disparate, participants.
Blockchain is an electronic ledger of transactions that are continuously maintained in blocks of records. The ledgers are jointly held and run by all participants. Coupled with cryptographic security, this makes them tamper-proof (at least in theory).
In a world where computer code is trusted more than human-run operations – especially amongst tech-savvy, urban millennials – the blockchain protocol – often referred to by the umbrella term 'distributed ledger technology' (or DLT) – will come to be seen as a powerful antidote to the high fees charged by intermediaries such as banks, law firms and other 'middlemen' because it enables individuals, corporations and devices to transact with each other independently.
Gary Barnett, chief analyst, Technology, Thematic Research at GlobalData, commented: ‘‘We are entering a new phase in the evolution of blockchain technology; over the next 24 months the more outlandish claims made by proponents of blockchain will be debunked and technology providers and users alike will begin looking with clearer eyes at the narrow but significant set of use-cases where blockchain and distributed ledger technology can add real value.’’
The blockchain industry is being shaped by a host of start-ups, platform providers and consortia on the supply side working with such forward-thinking customers as Goldman Sachs, Santander and Credit China FinTech in the financial services sector and IBM, Microsoft, Intel and Telstra in the technology sector. The British, Swedish and Singapore governments have embraced it too.
* Asset registries
* Financial services platforms
* Industrial platforms
* Asset registries.
In today’s world, when assets are exchanged, middlemen typically profit from the transaction. They include stock brokers, bankers, lawyers, trustees, notaries and accountants. By replacing these middlemen with a tamper-proof platform to exchange goods and services, blockchain technology could potentially increase efficiency and reduce costs in commercial marketplaces across a range of industries.
Financial services platforms
The financial services sector is where the bulk of venture capital investment is going, and where most of the early 'use cases' and applications are being developed. Blockchain technology is in the early phase of reinventing banking and capital markets for everything from remittances and foreign exchange to share trading and back office reconciliation and settlement.
Industrial platforms
Whilst banks and insurance companies are actively piloting DLT platforms, manufacturers are playing 'wait and see' as blockchain technology matures. Many are still at the proof-of-concept stage with partners.
The lion’s share of the benefits that organisations will derive from blockchain projects will have relatively little to do with the choice of blockchain as an underlying transaction platform. Instead, the vast majority of the benefits will come from the transformation, integration, and modernisation work that will be required in order to realise blockchain projects.
Barnett continues, ‘‘For every dollar spent on blockchain technology, between 5 and 20 dollars will be spent on transformation and modernisation.’’
Blockchain is not magic
Most blockchain projects will find that the difficult and often costly work of process modernisation, integration, and in many cases the blockchain or distributed ledger component will form a minor part of the overall solution.
Barnett adds: “Much of the hype surrounding blockchain has set out to confer magical properties on the technology; despite the hype, blockchain technology is not free, nor does it have the supernatural ability to transform your processes.
"Claims that blockchain technology will cut costs in financial services or logistics by 30 percent are fanciful to the point of being dishonest – since the bulk of these savings will come from the digitisation and modernisation of processes rather than blockchain or DLT.’’