Finance
How Blockchain Technology Is Impacting Financial Planning
Blockchain technology, the technology that keeps cryptocurrency secure, has come a long way since its inception. Today, the technology doesn’t just power popular cryptos like bitcoin and ethereum — it is also the vehicle for storing and trading non-fungible tokens (NFTs) and supporting the tokenization of real estate and fine art.
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Blockchain is faster and more secure than traditional transactional methods and is playing a tremendous role in financial planning and wealth transfer, which only promises to grow with time. For instance, the market for tokenized assets could reach $2 trillion to $4 trillion by 2030, according to a recent McKinsey & Company report. This is a far cry from numbers of $10 trillion previously projected by Boston Consulting Group. McKinsey reported that we may see the most growth in assets like mutual funds, bonds, ETFs and loans.
“Blockchain technology is still in early days and requires a material amount of integration with existing processes and standards,” Anthony Moro, CEO of Provenance Blockchain Labs, told CoinDesk. “Most institutions recognize tokenization needs to be a large part of their business moving forward, but technical integration is where the rubber meets the road.”
Here’s a look at the role blockchain might play in key areas of financial planning.
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What Is Blockchain Technology?
First, let’s back up for a quick review of exactly what blockchain is and how it works.
Blockchain is, essentially, a permanent, shared record book in digital form, or a decentralized ledger of transactions conducted over peer-to-peer networks. The ledger tracks transactions and also aims to build a consensus about whether the transaction data is valid. With blockchain technology, users can confirm transactions without requiring a central clearing authority.
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Why Is Blockchain Important?
Blockchain aims to deliver stored information immediately and transparently on a ledger that can be accessed only by network members. Members share a single view of orders, payments, accounts and other information, which helps build trust, efficiency and financial opportunities.
Blockchain eliminates the need for central recordkeeping, and because the ledger is made public, everyone involved can easily gain access. This transparency helps accelerate the verification process, reduce the need for back-office functions, and promote security.
How Does Blockchain Work?
One key element of blockchain is that every transaction requires a security measure to protect the identities of transacting parties. To secure transactions of bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, two keys are required — a private and a public key.
The public key is shared permanently in the log. It can be used to sign and encrypt a message. The private key is only known to users and acts as a pin code. A recipient uses this key to decrypt a transaction. The technology introduces speed, efficiency, security and reduced costs, albeit at the expense of tremendous environmental impact.
Processing transactions on the blockchain requires sophisticated computers that tend to be energy hogs. If this drawback can be addressed, we will undoubtedly see blockchain play an even larger role in financial planning. Here are a few ways it’s being used today.
Tokenization of Real Estate, Commodities, Fine Art and Illiquid Assets
Investors in fine art, commodities and real estate face several challenges. When you invest in art, you need a place to store and preserve the pieces, as well as insurance to protect it. By creating NFTs of artwork, these assets can be easily tradeable. They can even be duplicated, although this will diminish their ultimate value.
Tokenizing real estate via blockchain technology enables investors to deal in fractional shares, making investing in high-rise apartments or other commercial real estate more accessible to retail investors.
Streamlining Loan Funding and Dividend Payments
Smart contracts operate on the blockchain, with the terms of the agreement written into the code. Smart contracts eliminate the need for intermediaries for loan issuance or dividend payments. Blockchain can facilitate faster loan funding, as well as automatic dividend payments at faster speeds and lower costs.
Facilitating Faster Cross-Border Transactions
Because blockchain transactions are deregulated — without a central government authority behind them — cross-border transactions can take place quickly and seamlessly, with lower fees, according to a LinkedIn Pulse article by Charles Lau of Digital Perpetual.
P2P Lending Platforms and Crowdfunding
Likewise, blockchain is playing a role in facilitating peer-to-peer lending and crowdfunding transactions. Its security, transparency and speed can facilitate transactions at faster speeds and lower costs, with a smaller risk of fraud.
Whether you’re launching a business or seeking to invest in start-ups, blockchain can make it easier and more accessible.
Final Note
As much as blockchain has evolved this century, the technology is still in its relative infancy. As younger generations explore the possibilities, cryptocurrency, NFTs and other tokenized assets could play a large role in the transfer of generational wealth.
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This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: How Blockchain Technology Is Impacting Financial Planning
Finance
When should kids start learning about money? Advice from local financial advisor
REDMOND, Wash. — When should kids start learning about money, and preparing for adult expenses like rent, car payments, and insurance?
It’s a question asked recently by an ARC Seattle viewer.
We took the question to Adam Powell, Financial Advisor at Private Advisory Group in Redmond. Powell talked with ARC Seattle co-anchor Steve McCarron to share insights on the right age to form money habits, common financial mistakes parents unknowingly pass down to their children, and practical tips to set kids up for long-term financial success.
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Finance
Soft-saving era? Gen-Z embraces new financial trend that puts experiences over long-term planning
LOS ANGELES (KABC) — Many Gen-Zers are adopting a financial approach that prioritizes quality of life in the present, a trend that’s being called “soft saving.”
Bob Wheeler, a CPA, described the mindset as a shift in how young adults balance their current lifestyle with longterm planning.
“It’s really a financial approach of ‘I want to make sure I have a good quality of life, and I’m thinking about the future,’ but not as much as the present,” Wheeler said.
For many Gen Z consumers, that can mean spending more on experiences – like vacations or concerts – rather than saving for major purchases like a car or home.
Wheeler said the approach can offer emotional benefits.
“I think there are definitely benefits, I mean, less anxiety, feeling like life is what you want it to be, fulfillment, versus saving for later on,” he said.
Still, financial experts caution against ignoring longterm stability. Wheeler encouraged young workers to take advantage of employer-sponsored retirement plans.
“They’re not going to do the max. They’re going to do enough to make sure they’re getting the match from your employer, so maybe they’re doing 3% or 5%. Maybe they’re not maxing out their IRAs. Maybe they’re doing $2,500,” he said.
He also stressed the importance of building an emergency fund, typically enough to cover six months of expenses.
“I want people to enjoy their life now because tomorrow is not promised,” Wheeler said. “I also just really reiterate to them ‘and you need to have some money set aside because we don’t know.’”
But saving for a home may not be practical for everyone. In some places, renting can be cheaper, and tenants avoid maintenance costs.
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Finance
Local M&A advisory firm Matrix acquired by banking giant Citizens Financial – Richmond BizSense
Matri x Capital Markets Group is now a division of Citizens Financial Group. (Image Courtesy Citizens Financial Group)
Matrix Capital Markets Group is used to helping businesses line up mergers and acquisitions.
For its latest transaction, the Richmond-based M&A advisory and investment banking firm was itself the subject of the deal.
Matrix was acquired last week by Rhode Island-based banking giant Citizens Financial Group.
Matrix, along with its nearly three dozen employees, including 20 in Richmond, are now operating as a division of Citizens, within the $226 billion bank’s investment banking arm, Citizens JMP Securities.
Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed. It involved an asset purchase that bought out Matrix’s 15 shareholders.
The deal ends Matrix’s 38-year run as an independent firm, a notable streak in an industry where consolidation of smaller firms into larger ones is common.
Matrix was founded in Richmond in 1988 by Scott Frayser and Jeff Moore and has since hit its stride by building a niche in handling deals for companies in the downstream energy and convenience retail sector.
The firm has been run in recent years by president Spencer Cavalier and Cedric Fortemps, co-head of the firm’s largest investment banking team.
Fortemps said Matrix began to search for a larger acquirer last year.
Cedric Fortemps
“The board decided to see if we could find a partner and a transaction that could build on what we’ve built thus far,” Fortemps said.
Matrix enlisted investment banking firm Houlihan Lokey to help in the search and negotiate on its behalf, along with the law firm Calfee as its legal advisor.
Fortemps said Citizen rose to the top of the pack of suitors in part due to JMP Securities’ track record of acquiring smaller firms like Matrix.
“They have acquired four other firms very similar to ours. Seeing the successes they had with those groups… the playbook is really to let the firms continue to operate the way they had,” Fortemps said.
Matrix’s Richmond office in the Gateway Plaza building downtown will continue to operate, as will its second office in Baltimore.
The Matrix brand will continue to be used for the time being but will eventually be phased out.
Fortemps said the firm’s success and particularly its growth in recent years has been fueled by its expertise in working deals for downstream energy clients – such as wholesale fuels distributors, propane and heating oil distributors – and convenience store and gas station chains.
Matrix’s rise in that sector began in 1997, when it hired Tom Kelso, who lived in Baltimore and owned a heating oil fuels distribution business. Kelso, who would eventually serve as the firm’s president prior to Cavalier, had a vision to launch an M&A firm for that industry.
“It took seven to eight years to grow it but eventually we were able to get a reputation of really high quality work and those successes on smaller transactions resulted in us being considered for larger deals,” Fortemps said.
Today, 21of the firm’s 26 investment bankers work on the team that handles deals for those industries. It controls about 40% market share for the M&A market for those sectors, Fortemps said.
The firm closes nearly two dozen transactions a year over the last five years and has closed 500 deals since its inception.
The typical value of its deals is more than $20 million, though the transactions it has closed over the last three years in the energy and convenience retail sectors have grown to $140 million per deal, Matrix said.
Its largest deal to date was closed last year, involving the $1.6 billion acquisition of convenience store chain Giant Eagle.
Matrix also works deals in other industries such as lubricants distribution, automotive after-market suppliers and car washes, as well as outdoor recreation and the marine industry.
After decades of representing buyers and sellers in M&A, Fortemps said the Citizens deal was a new experience for the Matrix team: being the target of the transaction, rather than the ones facilitating it.
“It certainly made me appreciate everything our clients have to go through on the other side of the table,” he said.
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