What is an Asset-Backed Token? A Complete Guide to Security Token Assets.
https://medium.com/ico-launch-malta/what-is-an-asset-backed-token-a-complete-guide-to-security-token-assets-f7a0f111d443
Monday, February 24, 2020
What is an Asset-Backed Token?
What is a Security Token
What is a Security Token? A Comprehensive Guide to How They Work and Their Impact
Taylor Pearson : Oct 10, 2018
There’s been a lot of talk about security tokens recently. But what is a security token in the first place? How do they work? And how might they impact your job or business? That is, why should you care about them?
Before diving into the rest of these questions, it makes sense to first start with: what is a security?
A security is a fungible (mutually interchangeable) financial instrument that hold some monetary value. Broadly, securities can be categorized as either equity or debt.
An equity security represents an ownership interest in a company (like a share of Apple stock), and a debt security represents money that is borrowed and must be repaid, so the holder is entitled to the payments made on that debt by the issuer (like a corporate bond or U.S. Treasury bond).
Now, what are security tokens?
What is a Security Token?
Tokenized securities are simply securities with an electronic wrapper around them.
The value of this electronic wrapper is that it makes security tokens easier to trade in a way that complies with the appropriate regulations. There isn’t much upside to tokenizing public equities like Procter & Gamble stock because they are already so liquid: Almost anyone can buy and sell them without much of an issue.
You may have a good investment hypothesis that the apartment building down the street is going to appreciate, but you may not have a couple million bucks to put up to buy it — and if you do, you better be really confident because it’s going to be hard to sell. Because it’s difficult to sell (AKA illiquid), it’s worth less- that is, there is an illiquidity discount (usually cited as 20–30% in the academic literature).
There is currently a large amount of capital that would like to invest in illiquid securities like small Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) which may own the apartment building down the street from you or small businesses, but in order to do that, they have to lock up their capital for a long time. You can invest in a pizza shop, but there’s no way to get that money out if you need it for anything else: you have to wait until the pizza place is sold or pays dividends.
By contrast, if you want to buy stock in Apple, you can buy a single share for a couple hundred bucks and sell it in minutes if you change your mind.
Tokenized securities allow for businesses to lock in funds without locking investors in because the tokens are tradable on a secondary market. The business still gets to use the capital, but investors can exchange shares with each other.
Take, for example, a small, private American REIT: There are restrictions both at the fund level and regulatory level (e.g. less than 50% of shares can be owned by non-Americans, and you must have more than 100 investors to receive favorable tax treatment, but less than 2000 or you have to go public).
In effect, this means that if any of the investors want to trade their shares of the REIT with another investor, they have to call up the fund manager to get permission, and they have to find someone who wants to buy their shares who has been approved to trade by the fund manager as well.
This is a lot harder to do than just logging on to your Schwab or TD Ameritrade account, so today securities like small REITs and shares in a small business suffer from an illiquidity discount. The academic literature places this illiquidity at 20–30%. So if you own 100% of a small business worth $1 million, tokenizing the equity in the company would instantly move the value to $1.2 million.[1]
The major reason for the illiquidity discount, and the benefit from using security tokens, is that these securities can be traded around the world. It is still very difficult for investors to buy securities in other countries.
With a token, you could code restrictions into the token, enabling buyers and sellers to trade in a secondary market as long as the trade doesn’t violate the hardcoded restrictions.
Tokenizing equity in startups probably isn’t that valuable at least today because most startups are overfunded rather than capital constrained.
One possible early use case of security tokenization is a local business or franchise that has a proven concept and a few locations, but needs capital to expand. Currently, their funding options are limited. Having a more liquid tokenized security would let them get better funding terms, potentially removing a large chunk of the 20–30% illiquidity discount.
Broadly, you can think about security tokens as “Compliance as a Service.” By coding in compliance at the token level, you allow for more efficient markets with fewer rent-seeking intermediaries.
If you’re looking for more about blockchain and cryptocurrency for business, access my list of the best cryptocurrency resources.
How exactly do security tokens work?
At a high level, pretty much all security tokenization companies work the same way: An issuer (like the REIT fund manager or the pizza shop owner) issues a security token which represents an ownership claim in a company. The issuer then creates a whitelist of wallet addresses (usually Ethereum) of investors who are allowed to buy stakes in the company.
All the individuals on the whitelist have to prove that they are compliant with whatever the restrictions are for that particular security. At a minimum, this probably involves compying with KYC (know your customer) and AML (anti-money laundering) laws, as well as proving they are accredited investors.
There is no way a security token protocol can have the regulations of hundreds of jurisdictions baked into it, but the vast majority of regulations can be complied with by restricting whocan own the token. This is what the whitelist does.
Issuers can also outsource the curation of whitelists to third party providers including centralized exchanges. The whitelist then serves as a “liquidity pool,” where everyone on the whitelist can trade with each other because they have all been properly vetted.
Issuers will likely allow third party providers to do KYC/AML and due diligence on investors and add them to the whitelist, so that exchanges don’t have to go to issuers every time someone wants to trade their token. This should increase the liquidity of security tokens, making them (and the underlying security they represent) more valuable.
You can trade security tokens anywhere or anyway you want as long as your counterparty is whitelisted. tZero, Blocktrade and Open Finance are some of the first exchanges where individuals and institutions trade security tokens.
There are companies popping up that will help issuers tokenize securities like Harbor. Harbor exists as an oracle, an agent that verifies “real-world” data and submits it to the blockchain. In this case the data is whether the counterparty to a trade is whitelisted.
If you try to trade a security token with some counterparty, then that pings Harbor to make sure that they are whitelisted. If they are, the trade goes through. If not, it throws an error message and you aren’t allowed to complete the trade.
Security tokens are not bearer instruments like most other cryptoassets. Bitcoin is a bearer instrument because if someone gets your Bitcoin private key, they can spend your Bitcoin. Cash is also a bearer instrument — if I drop a $10 bill and you pick it up, you can spend it and I don’t have any way to stop you.
You can’t steal a security token because a token is not the security itself, it is an electronic representation. No one can transfer a token to their wallet unless their wallet is whitelisted, in which case they would have gone through KYC/AML so you would know who they were (and then, I suppose, you could send someone to arrest them).
Another advantage of security tokens is that they will help private companies keep track of their cap tables without an army of lawyers. You would assume in 2018 that this was already done electronically, but it’s still done mostly on paper, which is surprisingly problematic.
There was an infamously messy case in 2013 where Dole foods thought they had thirty six thousand shares outstanding but investors thought they owned forty nine thousands shares shares.
What are the potential impacts of security tokens?
One likely impact of security tokens is that we will need less security lawyers. A lot of the work of drafting “wet,” paper contracts will be replaced with writing “dry,” code contracts.
Knowledge of the law will still be necessary, so you could imagine that lawyers who learn to write smart contracts will be extremely valuable.
Another industry that is likely to be impacted is asset management. Historically, all that mattered for asset managers was their assets under management (AUM) and the management fees they generated. If an asset manager is managing $100 million, and they charge 1% of that as a management fee, they make $1 million/year regardless of whether they invest those assets well or not.
In a world dominated by security tokens, there would be nothing for them to “manage.” There are no stock certificates that need to get sent around by the back office.
Instead, you may see investment advisers that make buy and sell recommendations, and you, as an investor, can sign up to “follow” them and invest alongside them, and they’ll get paid for making the correct picks.
We’re also likely to see some emergent effects that we’ve never seen before. Imagine if all the real estate in New York City was tokenized. You could create Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs), like an Upper West Side ETF, Brooklyn ETF, and Financial District ETF.
That would let traders go long Brooklyn, short Upper East Side.
Security tokens are different from other financial innovations, like the credit default swaps and credit default obligations that caused the 2008 global financial crisis. One of the big causes of 2008 collapse was the concentration of risk.
With security tokens being on the blockchain, the regulators or anyone with access to the blockchain will always be able to know how concentrated the risk is because there is a lot more transparency.
Another emergent effect is that we will see new things being securitized that aren’t securitized today. Historically, it has been hard to securitize stuff like art, so there is a big illiquidity discount. Not many people can afford to buy a million dollar piece of art, but a lot more might buy 2% of it.
These assets could also be bundled up so you could go long French impressionist but short Modern art.
Financial regulators may eventually mandate the tokenization of securities. Because security tokens are effectively “compliance-as-a-service,” they makes regulators’ jobs easier.
Sunday, October 28, 2007
股神成功暗语
巴菲特是当今世界具有传奇色彩的证券投资家,他以独特、简明的投资哲学和策略,投资可口可乐、吉列、所罗门兄弟投资银行、通用电气等著名公司股票、可转换证券并大获成功。以下我们介绍巴菲特的投资理念---
赢家暗语:5+12+8+2
巴式方法大致可概括为5项投资逻辑、12项投资要点、8项选股标准和2项投资方式。
5项投资逻辑:
1.因为我把自己当成是企业的经营者,所以我成为优秀的投资人;因为我把自己当成投资人,所以我成为优秀的企业经营者。
2.好的企业比好的价格更重要。
3.一生追求消费垄断企业。
4.最终决定公司股价的是公司的实质价值。
5.没有任何时间适合将最优秀的企业脱手。
12项投资要点:
1.利用市场的愚蠢,进行有规律的投资。
2.买价决定报酬率的高低,即使是长线投资也是如此。
3.利润的复合增长与交易费用和税负的避免使投资人受益无穷。
4.不在意一家公司来年可赚多少,仅有意未来5至10年能赚多少。
5.只投资未来收益确定性高的企业。
6.通货膨胀是投资者的最大敌人。
7.价值型与成长型的投资理念是相通的;价值是一项投资未来现金流量的折现值;而成长只是用来决定价值的预测过程。
8.投资人财务上的成功与他对投资企业的了解程度成正比。
9.安全边际从两个方面协助你的投资:首先是缓冲可能的价格风险;其次是可获得相对高的权益报酬率。
10.拥有一只股票,期待它下个星期就上涨,是十分愚蠢的。
11.就算联储主席偷偷告诉我未来两年的货币政策,我也不会改变我的任何一个作为。
12.不理会股市的涨跌,不担心经济情势的变化,不相信任何预测,不接受任何内幕消息,只注意两点:A.买什么股票;B.买入价格。
8项投资标准:
1.必须是消费垄断企业。
2.产品简单、易了解、前景看好。
3.有稳定的经营史。
4.经营者理性、忠诚,始终以股东利益为先。
5.财务稳键。
6.经营效率高、收益好。
7.资本支出少、自由现金流量充裕。
8.价格合理。
2项投资方式:
1.卡片打洞、终生持有,每年检查一次以下数字:
A.初始的权益报酬率;
B.营运毛利;
C.负债水准;
D.资本支出;
E.现金流量。
2.当市场过于高估持有股票的价格时,也可考虑进行短期套利。
某种意义上说,卡片打洞与终生持股,构成了巴式方法最为独特的部分。也是最使人入迷的部分。
长期制胜的法宝:远离市场
透彻研究巴式方法,会发觉影响其最终成功的投资决定,虽然确实与市场尚未反映的信息有关,但所有信息却都是公开的,是摆在那里谁都可以利用的。
没有内幕消息,也没有花费大量的金钱。是运气好吗就像学术界的比喻:
当有1000只猴子掷币时,总有一只始终掷出正面。
但这解释不了有成千上万个投资人参加的投资竞赛中,只有巴菲特一人取得连续32年战胜市场的纪录。
其实,巴菲特的成功,靠的是一套与众不同的投资理念,不同的投资哲学与逻辑,不同的投资技巧。在看似简单的操作方法背后,你其实能悟出深刻的道理,又 简单到任何人都可以利用。巴菲特曾经说过,他对华尔街那群受过高等教育的专业人士的种种非理性行为感到不解。也许是人在市场,身不由己。所以他最后离开了 纽约,躲到美国中西部一个小镇里去了。
他远离市场,他也因此战胜了市场。