The blockchain IPO takes the concept further. Now, companies can raise funds
“on the blockchain”
by issuing tokens, or cryptosecurities, of some value in the
company. They can represent equity, bonds, or, in the case of Augur, market-maker
seats on the platform, granting owners the right to decide which prediction markets
the company will open. Ethereum was an even
greater success than Augur, funding
the development of a whole new blockchain through a crowd sale of its native token,
ether. Today Ethereum is the second-longest and fastest-growing public blockchain.
The average investment in the Augur crowdfunding was $750, but one can easily
imagine minimum subscriptions of a dollar or even ten cents. Anyone in the world—
even the poorest and most remote people—could become stock market investors.
Overstock, the e-retailer, is launching perhaps the most ambitious cryptosecurity
initiative yet. Overstock’s forward-thinking founder, Patrick Byrne,
believes
blockchain “can do for the capital markets what the Internet has done for consumers.”
The project, dubbed Medici, enables companies to issue securities on the blockchain
and recently received the support of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
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The
company began issuing its first blockchain-based securities, such as the $5 million
cryptobond for an affiliate of FNY Capital, in 2015.
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Overstock claims many
financial services firms and other companies are lining up to use the platform. Surely,
the tacit approval of the SEC will give Overstock a head start on what is sure to be a
long journey.
Should blockchain
IPOs continue to gain traction, they will ultimately disrupt
many of the roles in the global financial system—brokers, investment bankers, and
securities lawyers—and change the nature of investment. By integrating blockchain
IPOs with new platforms for value exchange such as Circle, Coinbase (the most well-
funded bitcoin exchange start-up), Smartwallet (a global asset exchange for all forms
of value), and other emerging companies, we expect a distributed
virtual exchange to
emerge. The old guard is taking notice. The NYSE invested in Coinbase and
NASDAQ is integrating blockchain technology into its private market. Bob Greifeld,
CEO of NASDAQ, is starting small, using blockchain to “streamline financial record
keeping while making it cheaper and more accurate,”
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but evidently NASDAQ and
other incumbents have bigger plans.
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