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Technology

The World Bank is Preparing For the World's First Blockchain Bond (cnbc.com) 36

The World Bank has mandated Commonwealth Bank of Australia to arrange the world's first blockchain bond. From a report: The Kangaroo bond, referring to foreign bonds issued in Australia in the local currency, has been named bond-i, an acronym standing for Blockchain Offered New Debt Instrument. (It's also a reference to Bondi Beach, an iconic spot in Sydney.) According to the institution, the bond will be the first in the world to be created, allocated, transferred and managed with blockchain technology. That tech, which underpins cryptocurrencies like bitcoin, refers to the distributed ledger technology that securely records all transactions made on the chain. "Blockchain has the potential to streamline processes among numerous debt capital market intermediaries and agents. This can help simplify raising capital and trading securities; improve operational efficiencies; and enhance regulatory oversight," a joint release from the two organizations said.
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The World Bank is Preparing For the World's First Blockchain Bond

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 10, 2018 @11:22AM (#57102388)

    We need to move now. Our competitors already vertically integrate granular paradigms. At the end of the day, the marketplace has changed. Tee up strategically or dialog. If we circle back, we will unfortunately be lagging in world-class passion. Our enterprise center is focused on new ways to gamify the consumer space through vertical deployments of traction.

    • You sirs, have bright futures ahead of you in the boardroom.

      On a more serious note, while I have seen all the pyscho-babble similar to what's been quoted, "...thepotential to streamline processes among numerous debt capital market intermediaries and agents....blah, blah" Literally I have never seen, in any scenario, where the presenter explains how blockchain will do these things.

      • You sirs, have bright futures ahead of you in the boardroom.

        Yeah. My bullshit bingo card exploded.

  • So instead of mining coins, you're mining shares of this bond?

    • by jythie ( 914043 )
      I suspect they are not offloading it onto random miners, but instead it is being done by serveres controlled by the exchanges or banks.
      • In which case, why isn't this "trusted third party" in disguise?

        The benefit of blockchain is supposed to be that it's tamper proof because everyone is constantly validating it in the open, something that can only happen if everyone has a chance of a reward for doing it.

        • by jythie ( 914043 )
          It is pretty much still the 'trusted 3rd party in disguise', but with one exception : the workload could be spread out between multiple institutions/exchanges that do not trust each other. So it would not change anything for the end trader, but could remove the need for a 'everyone trusts' arbitrator between banks.
          • I guess that makes sense. The organisations that need the trust do the work, and the blockchain is kept private among those organisations.

  • by cas2000 ( 148703 ) on Friday August 10, 2018 @12:54PM (#57102940)

    blockchain and bitcoin hype is ridiculous, but this is just absurd.

    "Kangaroo bonds" (they bounce right back, right?) and "bond-i". yeah, right.

    And since when does the World Bank tell the Commonwealth Bank of Australia what to do?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Mandate is an overloaded term, I don't think it means ordering here but more like giving a mandate as in elections.

      It's real by the way : http://www.worldbank.org/en/news/press-release/2018/08/09/world-bank-mandates-commonwealth-bank-of-australia-for-worlds-first-blockchain-bond

      I don't think they understand what distributed means though, they run their own Ethereum blockchain. So it's just a centralized alternative to existing centralized security settlement system, only advantage I see is there will be no

  • A 'financial instrument' based on an unregulated gambling greater fool bubble.

    Its too bad we dont have any experience with 'financial instruments' and derivatives in any other unregulated area.

    • Just because 95% of crypto currencies are junk nonsense, doesn't mean that none have utility.

      I do understand that the vast majority of "popular" crypto currencies are in the nonsense and have no utility category. But there are some that have a real world use and will disrupt some existing industries.

      It's a bit like saying all tech companies were worthless junk during the .com boom, which would be nonsense. But there most certainly was quite a pile of junk still.

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