the teller offering 2 percent—not because it’s the cheapest but because this teller has a
five-star rating and has agreed to meet her halfway. They meet and she swaps her
Abra pesos for physical pesos, the teller makes his commission, and they both walk
away happy. Abra takes a 25-basis-point fee on conversion.
The entire process, from money leaving Toronto to the
Filipino recipient holding
cash, takes less than an hour and costs 25 basis points net, inclusive of foreign
exchange and all other transaction costs. Whereas every Western Union transaction
requires up to seven or eight intermediaries—corresponding banks, local banks,
Western Union, the individual agents, and others—the Abra transaction requires only
three: two peers and the Abra platform. “I get it now. That’s really cool!” said Analie,
ecstatically.
46
For Abra to scale globally, it must address two core challenges. First, the network
requires a critical mass of tellers to make the service convenient. Analie’s mom won’t
use it if the nearest teller is twenty miles away. Abra understands this, and it is
presigning tellers—at last count many thousands in the Philippines alone—who are
ready to transact when things go live. Second, the model
works on the assumption that
tellers and customers will abide by their commitment when they transfer digital for
physical currency. This is less of a concern. Businesses like Airbnb, Lending Club,
and Zipcar have debunked the myth that individuals will not trust one another. Indeed,
for Abra CEO Bill Barhydt, the staggering growth in the number of so-called sharing
economy companies convinced him this wasn’t an issue. “People are willing to trust
each other faster than they’re willing to trust an institution,” he said.
47
The smart phone is key to all of this. In the same way the smart phone allows you
to rent your apartment to someone else or rent your car to someone else or provide
ride sharing to someone else, it can also be used as an ATM. Barhydt said, “It’s
amazing what people are willing to do in a shared economy model and they’re just not
doing
it for money yet, maybe with the exception of peer-to-peer lending.” Moreover,
he said, “It’s more important to us that you trust each other rather than Abra. If you
trust each other, it’s highly likely that you’re going to get to know Abra, and that
you’re going to like it and you’re going to have a good experience,” and ultimately
trust the platform.
48
Abra is not a remittance app but instead a new global platform for value exchange
that combines in equal measure the distributed, trustless blockchain network, the
power
of smart phone technology, and the very human inclination to want to trust
peers in a network. By offering users the ability to store value in traditional
currencies, transmit value across the network, and also pay at a growing merchant
network, Abra takes on not only Western Union, but also the credit card networks,
like Visa. According to Barhydt:
The settlement rails for a Western Union transaction, and the settlement rails
for a Visa transaction, are very different. But the settlement rails for an Abra
transaction that’s used for
both person-to-person payment, as well as person-
to-merchant payments, are exactly the same. . . . We have come up with a
single solution that works domestically or cross-border, and that can be used
for both person-to-person payments and person-to-merchant payments for
the first time.
49
Abra might eventually become a global juggernaut, rattling the walls of the
biggest financial institutions in the world. But for now, it’s an elegant and simple
solution to an important global problem. With remittances
topping half a trillion
dollars next year, the market opportunity is nothing to sneeze at.
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