Vanguard, in partnership with technology provider Symbiont, has completed the first phase of a blockchain pilot designed to digitalise the issuance of asset-backed securities (ABS). In close collaboration with a large US ABS issuer, as well as BNY Mellon, Citi, and State Street, Vanguard successfully modelled the full lifecycle of an ABS settlement on distributed ledger technology (DLT) network by replicating end-to-end transaction flows.
“Vanguard is dedicated to providing innovative, world-class solutions that help advance the financial services industry,” says Warren Pennington, principal and head of Vanguard’s Investment Management FinTech Strategies Group. “By digitising and streamlining the ABS issuance process, we will be able to increase the speed and transparency of transactions while reducing costs and minimising exposure to risk, which ultimately leads to a more efficient business model for future generations of capital market activity.”
Vanguard and Symbiont have been working diligently with a large US ABS issuer and participants in the banking industry to improve the process of securitisation of ABS issuances. The vision for pairing Symbiont’s Assembly DLT with smart contracts—self-executing contracts that are triggered when an agreed-upon event occurs—is to offer increased information flow, enhance price discovery and secondary market liquidity, and automate key corporate actions through the use of a common infrastructure that is open to all market participants.
Puneet Singhvi, FMI Head and Markets and Securities Services lead for Blockchain, DLT and Digital Assets, Citi, says: “We continue to assess new technologies, collaborating with our clients and partners, with a focus on making the risk transfer process across the industry more robust and efficient.”
Leveraging Symbiont’s DLT network, Vanguard is working to transform and automate the current capital markets infrastructure to deliver better outcomes and reduced costs for market participants. The pilot provides the technical and operational foundation critical to supporting an asset issuance on a distributed ledger network. Market dynamics, such as periods of sustained volatility and illiquidity, have highlighted the need for faster, increasingly transparent and more automated markets where digital capabilities can help alleviate liquidity and funding concerns.
Mark Smith, CEO of Symbiont, says: “There is considerable significance to the completion of the pilot program. The successful demonstration of an ABS issuance is a momentous step forward in fundamentally changing capital markets infrastructure through blockchain technology. 2020 may be the year that, for the first time, market participants will see a live ledger-based issuance.”