JPMorgan’s Umar Farooq said that use cases haven’t arisen fully and regulation hasn’t yet caught up.
The head of JPMorgan’s digital assets unit Umar Farooq has suggested that most of the crypto assets on the market are “junk” and that real crypto use cases have yet to fully present themselves.
During a panel discussion at the Monetary Authority of Singapore’s Green Shoots Seminar on Tuesday, Farooq stated that regulation is yet to catch up to the burgeoning industry, which is holding back many traditional financial (TradFi) institutions from getting involved.
He also opined that with the exception of a few, utility for most crypto assets is lacking:
“So in my mind, the use cases haven’t arisen fully, and the regulation hasn’t caught up and I think that’s why you see the financial industry, in general, being a little bit slow in catching up,” added Farooq, who serves as CEO of JPMorgan’s blockchain unit Onyx Digital Assets (ODA).
The JPMorgan executive also argued that the sector hasn’t matured enough to where it can be utilized at scale to facilitate high-value “serious transactions” between TradFi institutions, or to host products such as tokenized deposits (an existing bank deposit held as a liability against depository institutions).
Instead, Farooq suggested crypto, blockchain and the broader Web3 movement is primarily providing a vehicle for wild speculation at this stage:
While JPMorgan has become relatively crypto-friendly over the past couple of years, the banking giant is primarily focused on blockchain technology and how it can be used to specifically improve TradFi services.
Crypto Biz: Step aside, Warren Buffett; stablecoin issuers hold more US debt than Berkshire Hathaway
In May, Cointelegraph reported that JPMorgan had trialed tokenized collateral settlements via its own private blockchain. The test saw two of its entities transfer a tokenized representation of Black Rock Inc. money market fund shares.
Author
Administraroot