Why big banks are snubbing open ledgers to build their own private blockchains
DRW founder Don Wilson says public blockchains conflict with how institutions trade and manage risk, limiting adoption.
What to know:
- Don Wilson, founder and CEO of DRW, said Wall Street firms are unlikely to adopt fully transparent public blockchains because open ledgers conflict with how institutions manage risk and protect trading strategies.
- Publishing every institutional trade onchain would violate fiduciary duty by revealing large investors’ intentions, increasing price impact and enabling front-running, he said.
- While Wilson sees opportunities in tokenizing real-world assets, he expects institutions to favor private or permissioned blockchain systems that prioritize privacy, control over data and market-structure protections over the transparency of public chains like Ethereum.
Wall Street firms may embrace blockchain technology, just not in its current form. The open, distributed ledger visible to all comers runs counter to the way traditional finance works, said Don Wilson, the founder and CEO of DRW, a TradFi trading firm that’s been active in crypto for over a decade.
“There is no world in which institutions are going to say, ‘Oh yeah, just publish all of my trades onchain,’” Wilson said at the Digital Asset Summit in New York on Thursday. “Any money manager would view it as a failure of fiduciary duty to publish to the world every trade that they’re doing.”
Having every trade visible conflicts with how institutions manage risk and protect trading strategies, Wilson said. If an investor with a large stake in a company starts selling the stock, other market participants will be able to detect the pattern and the initial trades will have a “huge price impact” on the investor’s later trades. In other words, the transparency works against the trader.
“The problem is not the technology itself, but how it is implemented,” Wilson said. “I think that it’s a mistake to put stuff on these chains that have complete transparency.”
