Mastercard chief executive Michael Miebach wants to use blockchain tech selectively for things like... [+] Jamel Toppin for Forbes
“There will always be new payment technology,” says Michael Miebach, chief executive of Mastercard, the world’s second-largest credit card company. “First there were cards using ISO 8583 [ISO numbers refer to international standards] messaging technology, which is 50 years old, then real-time payments became real with ISO 20022. And then came blockchain, and we said okay, what would that solve? There’s a whole set of real-life problems out there that blockchain can solve.”
In late January, the 55-year-old Miebach told analysts and shareholders that his company had surpassed 2 billion “tokenized” transactions per month, up 38% in a year, and that Mastercard was enabling digital payments in 110 countries. The big benefit? Less fraud.
Today, tokenization at Mastercard means replacing the 16-digit number on your plastic credit card with a supersecure unique digital record for every transaction, without ever leaving behind your identity in the form of a credit card number. It’s not yet on a blockchain, but Mastercard is currently working with banks and merchants to tokenize a variety of assets, including deposits, which will be tracked on multiple public and private blockchains.
“You can tokenize anything,” Miebach says. “I think we’re going to have a world where everything will be tokenized and will be passed around in a safe fashion.”
Mastercard is one of 22 financial companies that made Forbes’ 2023 Blockchain 50 list of billion-dollar companies putting distributed-ledger technology to real use. Mastercard is also a prototypical corporate middleman. It raked in $22 billion in revenue and $10 billion in profit last year from the fees it charges merchants to, essentially, help customers spend their own money. In other words, Mastercard is exactly the type of company that crypto zealots love to hate.
But it is trusted by millions of merchants worldwide. And in the wake of Web3’s never-ending barrage of scandals, scams and swindles, trust is exactly what the sector needs. Smelling opportunity, blue chip financial giants, including BlackRock, JPMorgan and Fidelity, have become some of the biggest champions of the new technology.
It’s been a tough year for crypto—and blockchain has not been spared. Here are some big company blockchain projects that have been shelved.
A.P. Moller-Maersk
TradeLens, the blockchain platform Maersk co-developed with IBM, was launched in 2018 to cut time and paperwork out of tracking containers as they move through global seaports. But achieving the necessary level of cooperation between competitors and countries proved impossible, so Maersk will shutter it this quarter.
Australian Securities Exchange (ASX)
After five years of trying to build a blockchain replacement for its aged settlement system, Australia’s primary stock exchange pulled the plug in November after Accenture found significant design flaws. ASX took a $170 million loss on the project.
Honeywell
The industrial conglomerate was using blockchain to digitize aircraft records and even had a marketplace for used aviation parts called GoDirect Trade. Development was halted as of November and staff working on the project have since left the company.
Silvergate Bank
The crypto-focused bank experienced a run related to the FTX blowout. Over the course of 2022, deposits shrank from $14.7 billion to $3.8 billion. Silvergate fired 40% of its staff and lost nearly a billion dollars. It also wrote down its purchase of Meta’s failed Diem cryptocurrency project.
“What do you need for blockchain to scale?” asks Miebach, whose company launched 35 new crypto-friendly debit and credit cards last year. “It scaled for traditional payments because people trust experience, they trust data privacy and they trust they won’t be taken for a ride.”
Other “TradFi” CEOs are right alongside Miebach, beating the crypto drum. In December David Solomon, the CEO of Goldman Sachs, penned an opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal headlined “Blockchain Is Much More Than Crypto,” in which the boss of Wall Street’s most iconic firm cautioned against dismissing the technology in the wake of the Sam Bankman-Fried/FTX fiasco. The crux of his argument? “Under the guidance of a regulated financial institution like ours blockchain innovations can flourish.”
“There’s a whole set of real-life problems out there that blockchain can solve.”
Big banks like Goldman have largely avoided directly investing in cryptocurrencies but have quietly been working with their underlying technology. “We see huge commercial opportunities,” says Mathew McDermott, head of digital assets at Goldman Sachs. In November, his 70-person team underwrote a €100 million bond offering for the European Investment Bank in conjunction with Santander and Société Générale. The process took just 60 seconds. Typically, a bond sale like this takes about five days.
“[There are] people who would like to continue to trade the crypto market, and we’re keen to [help] through derivatives or options,” McDermott adds. One strong piece of evidence pointing to the value of trust: In 2022, big unregulated crypto exchanges like Binance, Huobi and OKX saw volume fall by more than 25% through September, while CME, Chicago’s highly regulated futures trading exchange, saw increases of 62% in bitcoin futures and 80% in ethereum futures over the same period.
Likewise, Fidelity is seizing upon the crisis in crypto confidence by flooding Instagram feeds with advertisements for its soon-to-launch Fidelity Crypto. “Get on the early-access list to trade bitcoin and ethereum,” reads one promotion. “Start with the names you know, invest with a name you can trust.”
The nation’s oldest bank, 238-year-old BNY Mellon, already offers digital asset custody for U.S. asset managers and provides back-office services to 19 Canadian crypto ETFs and mutual funds. Like David Solomon at Goldman, Mellon’s chief executive, Robin Vince, took to the newspapers to announce the seriousness of his bank’s crypto plans, writing a December article in the Financial Times entitled “Time for a Reset of the Crypto Opportunity.”
JPMorgan’s 66-year-old CEO, Jamie Dimon, called cryptocurrencies “decentralized Ponzi schemes” last fall, but his bankers have been hard at work using blockchain tech to execute $550 billion in repurchase agreements since 2020.
“There will always be new payment technology.”
“The next generation for markets, the next generation for securities, will be tokenization,” insisted Larry Fink, chief executive of BlackRock—the world’s largest asset manager, with $8.6 trillion under management—at a DealBook conference in November. For now, BlackRock is mostly acting as a service provider for a select few so-called “crypto-native” companies. It has partnered with Coinbase to offer BlackRock’s thousands of institutional investor and wealth management customers access to bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies through its Aladdin portfolio management software. It also holds $34 billion in Treasury bills as reserves for Circle’s U.S. dollar–backed stablecoin, USDC.
While established financial institutions are shrewdly stepping forward to supplant crypto startups, there are worries among crypto industry purists over the future of blockchain technology. One schism: Web3 evangelists love open-source, decentralized “public” blockchains. Big enterprises (and totalitarian governments) prefer “private” blockchains precisely because they offer more control.
That remains true even after some big private blockchain projects failed spectacularly. In 2020, former Blockchain 50 member Honeywell began using private blockchain Hyperledger Fabric for buying and selling used aerospace parts. Development was halted as of November 2022. Maersk and IBM scrapped their TradeLens global shipping supply chain blockchain in November after hiring 19 staffers and spending more than four years on the project.
Public blockchains can offer advantages in terms of speed and cost. Private equity pioneer KKR, whose funds manage $496 billion worth of assets, recently opened its $4 billion Health Care Strategic Growth Fund to distribution via Avalanche, a fast public blockchain that boasts 4,500 transactions per second (Ethereum can still handle only 15). Other Avalanche users include CME Group, payments company FIS and Mastercard.
“I think we’re going to have a world where everything will be tokenized and will be passed around in a safe fashion.”
In China, cryptocurrencies and crypto mining are illegal, but blockchain is an important part of President Xi Jinping’s Vision 2035 national development strategy. None of China’s sanctioned blockchains are public. China’s blockchain technology base, including its Blockchain-based Service Network (BSN), which has been described as a digital Silk Road connecting (and monitoring) multiple blockchains, is far outpacing development in the United States.
Two years ago, Blockchain 50 member China Construction Bank built a platform that cuts out Swift, the most widely used interbank system for transferring funds. It recently launched a giant distributed ledger for credit reports that lets bank subsidiaries share information while complying with government privacy regulations.
It has already used its blockchain to give $4.2 billion in credit to 2 million customers and hopes to reach 700 million people by mid-2025. In addition to China Construction Bank, five Chinese companies, including Tencent, WeBank and Alibaba’s Ant Group, feature on this year’s Blockchain 50.
Mastercard’s Miebach thinks crypto’s latest woes might actually speed up adoption of the new technology. “You are going to get more mainstream players in and the regulators are going to show up to address the risks,” he says. “That’s a recipe for this to become a mainstream technology. I think [crypto’s] recent winter storm is going to help.
I report on all things crypto and oversee the Forbes Crypto Confidential newsletter and the annual Forbes Blockchain 50 list which features billion-dollar leaders in distributed ledger
Sam Bankman-Fried, former CEO of FTX... Photo: Getty Images
The financial collapse of FTX may seem like a distant concern since the mostly unregulated industry is different from software, e-commerce, manufacturing, or services. But the heart of FTX’s strategic error – using customer funds to pay for risky business bets – exists throughout the small business community.
Many entrepreneurs do not even realize they are doing it. The strategy lurks in the working capital section of balance sheets and cash flow statements, where many managers do not know to look. As a fractional CFO, I see it all the time, usually when a new client comes to me in a state of financial distress. FTX is now accused of ethical violations. Are you at risk of committing the same ethical errors?
Customer financing in business
FTX used their customer’s deposits to place risky bets for profit. That strategy works when everything goes according to plan, but it’s a house of cards when something unexpected happens.
Using customer deposits and prepayments to fuel business bets exists in nearly every industry. Here are some scenarios:
SaaS deferred revenue
A SaaS company offers a 20% discount to pay for the year up-front. The SaaS company uses these deferred revenues to invest in advertising and sales but fails to generate a healthy return. Seven months later, the company goes bankrupt and can not refund its customers.
E-commerce backorders
A celebrity releases a limited-edition gym shoe. One reputable online store offers pre-orders for $1,500 each and sells out quickly. Several months pass, and the customers have yet to receive their shoes. Some apply for refunds only to discover the company’s cancelation policy is punitive and unreasonable. Eventually the company declares bankruptcy without giving any customers their money back. (Inspired by this true story.)
General construction mis-bid
A general contractor (GC) bids on a big construction job that pays 50% upfront for materials. Supply chain constraints and a tight labor market crush the GC’s budget, creating delays and cost overruns. Faced with a financial impossibility, the GC walks off the job, leaving the customer with a half-completed project.
All three small businesses used customer deposits (a liability) to fund some risky bet – a construction job, a rare new sneaker, or growing the core business. To be clear, these are not bad business strategies. In fact, the GC, crushed by macroeconomic forces, was mainly just unlucky. Nonetheless, each was a betrayal to the customers who did not explicitly consent to the risks taken with their money.
The Ethics of Customer Deposits
If you are taking deposits or prepayments from customers, you have an ethical responsibility to soundly manage your business’ financials. Here are my top 3 tips to make sure you are behaving ethically.
Know your working capital structure: You must know your working capital risk by knowing your balance sheet. Consult a financial advisor if you have doubts about your working capital knowledge.
Know your regulations: Real estate, title, finance, and attorneys must maintain separate accounts for customer deposits. Take time to know which regulations apply to you and invest in accounting resources to maintain accurate records.
Forecast monthly: Use an operating forecast to project cash flow, test scenarios, and avoid crashing the business. I recommend running through “disaster planning” once a year so you are familiar with the signs and symptoms of a downturn and can respond accordingly.
Do not kill the golden goose: Successful entrepreneurs often chase new ideas with zeal at the expense of existing and profitable businesses. Never bet the house on a new product, service, or market. For a bootstrapping company, avoid investing more than 20% of your revenue into R&D or growing a new market.
Prepare backup capital: Be prepared for emergency funding if needed. You cannot secure new financing during distress, so you should prepare capital sources during the good times. Options for small businesses include:
Business lines of credit
Owner personal funds and contributions
Assets that can be sold quickly
Know when to pull the plug: Sometimes the most responsible thing you can do is fold the business before the damage becomes too great. Set clear limits with your management team about when the game is lost. Examples include:
We will not incur more than $x in debt
We will close the division if volume drops below X units per month
We will quit that project if we cannot hit the deadline by xx/xx/xxxx
Keep your stakeholders in mind: Remember that your business has more stakeholders than shareholders. Financial management is an ethical responsibility for all entrepreneurs. If your business is running out of cash or you are unsure how to manage working capital responsibly, ask for help now. It is your ethical duty.
In 2014, I bought 25,000 dogecoin as a joke. By 2021, it was briefly worth over $17,000. Problem was, I couldn’t remember the password. Determined to get my coins back, I embarked on a journey that exposed me to online hackers, the mathematics behind passwords, and a lot of frustration.
Although most people don’t have thousands in forgotten cryptocurrency, everyone relies on passwords to manage their digital lives. And as more and more people buy crypto, how can they protect their assets? We talked to a host of experts to figure out how to create the best passwords for your digital accounts, and, if you have crypto, what your basic storage tradeoffs are. Let’s dive in.
How to Hack Your Own Crypto Wallet
There are a few common ways to lose crypto. You might have a wallet on a hard drive you throw away. Your exchange could get hacked. You might lose your password, or you might get personally hacked and have your coins stolen. For those who lose their password, as I did, hackers actually present a silver lining. If you still control your wallet, you can try to hack your own wallet—or find someone who will.
So I contacted Dave Bitcoin, an anonymous hacker famous for cracking crypto wallets. He agreed to help break into the wallet, for his standard 20 percent fee—paid only if he is successful. Dave and other hackers are mostly using brute force techniques. Basically, they’re just guessing passwords—a lot of them.
You can also try to hack your own wallet with apps like Pywallet or Jack the Ripper. But I didn’t want to do it myself, so I sent Dave a list of password possibilities and he got started.
After a little waiting, I received an email from Dave. “I tried over 100 billion passwords on your wallet,” Dave told me over email. I assumed such a mind-boggling amount of tries meant my coins were surely recovered, but alas, we had only scratched the surface. The password was not hacked, and my coins remained lost. But how?
The Math Behind Strong Passwords
Each new digit in a password makes it exponentially harder to crack. Consider a one-digit password that could be a letter or a number. If the password is case-sensitive, there are 52 letters plus 10 numerals. Not very secure. You could simply guess the password by trying 62 times. (A, a, B, b, C, c … and so on).
Now make it a two-digit password. It doesn’t get twice as hard to guess—it gets 62 times harder to guess. There are now 3884 possible passwords to guess (AA, Aa, AB, etc.) A six-digit password with the same rules has around 56 billion possible permutations, assuming we don’t use special characters. A 20-character password with those rules has 62-to-the-20th-power permutations: that is, 704,423,425,546,998,022,968,330,264,616,370,176 possible passwords. That makes 100 billion look pretty small in comparison.
This math was bad news for me, since I’m pretty sure I had some sort of long password, like a few lines of a song lyric. Talk about facing the music.
Password Best Practices
Whether it’s for your email or crypto wallet, how can you balance creating a strong password that’s also memorable? “Choosing passwords is tricky,” says Dave, “If you go out of your way to create an unusual password for your wallet that you wouldn’t typically use, then it makes it quite difficult for you to remember and for me to help.
It’s easier to guess your password if you use consistent patterns. Of course, this is bad for security, and someone who is trying to hack your accounts will have an easier time.” Balancing security with memorability is ultimately a tough task that will depend on the individual’s needs and preferences.
“All I can really suggest is to either record all your passwords on paper (and take the risk that it will be found), or use a password manager,” Dave says. Ironically, the digital age is now making pen and paper a preferred security method. Russia’s state security agency supposedly reverted to typewriters after the Snowden leaks.
Are Coins on Crypto Exchanges Safe?
Losing my password made me a pretty big fan of storing crypto on exchanges. After all, if you forget your Coinbase password, the process is simple. You reset your password, and likely submit identification to verify that you own the account. On the surface, storing on big exchanges seems pretty secure.
Coinbase says they keep “over 98 percent of deposits offline in secure cold storage facilities” in addition to having an “extensive insurance policy.” Thus, it should be difficult or impossible for cybercriminals to access most of the crypto Coinbase controls.
Gemini, another popular US-based exchange, prides itself on its seemingly extensive security measures. At the same time, if your exchange suffers a major hack or goes bankrupt, it could take years to recover your crypto, if you get it back at all. That’s why many analysts recommend users maintain control over their coins…..Continue reading
When you first graduate from college, you might not feel comfortable dumping lots of money into unknown stocks or ETFs. Even if you’re not a new college graduate, you may want to consider a different approach when you don’t have a lot of extra cash lying around. Why not try micro investing?
Micro investing takes the daunting feeling away from investing, and therein lies its true magic. Let’s take a look at what it can do for you and how it can find a place in your portfolio.
What is Micro Investing?
Put simply, when you micro invest, you invest using small amounts of money. In other words, you pony up money to buy fractional shares of stocks or ETFs instead of full shares.
As of today, a single share of Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) costs $3,383.87. You may know you can’t even afford one share of Amazon, much less two shares!
Enter micro investing apps. You can buy Amazon for a much smaller amount — even really small amounts, like $10. You can also buy multiple securities to aim for diversification (always a great thing!) and lower your risk in the long run.
Why Micro Invest?
Small amounts, compounded over time, can make an impact. Compound interest makes your money grow faster. You can calculate interest on accumulated interest as well as on your original principal. Compounding can create a snowball effect: The original investments plus the income earned from those investments both grow.
Let’s say you save $1 per day. Your $1 per day adds up to $365 a year. Instead of spending that $365, you could stick it into a micro investing app at 5% interest per year. Your small amount would grow to almost $466 by the end of five years. At the end of 30 years, the amount you originally invested would grow to $1,578.
If you micro invested even more, your investment could grow even faster.
How Does Micro Investing Work?
Have you ever heard of the app, Acorns, which invests small change for you? That’s micro investing. A micro investing app rounds up your purchases to the dollar or makes automatic transfers for you. Think of micro investing as “spare change investing” — many apps round up your transactions from a linked bank account and invest the difference.
In other words, let’s say you go to Chipotle and order a mega burrito with those delicious limey chips. You spend $10.34. The app would take your remaining $0.66 and invest it.
You don’t have to invest a lot to get started, either. Stash allows you to get started with just a penny. Interested in micro investing for your favorite college grad or yourself? Take a look at the following steps to get started with micro investing.
Step 1: Choose a micro investing app.
What’s often the hardest part? Choosing the right investment app. Often the most important question comes down to this: Do you want to get your hands directly on your investments or do you want an app to pilot and direct your money for you?
Quick overview: Acorns and Betterment put a portfolio together for you based on your preferences. Stash and Robinhood allow you to choose the direction you want your money to take by allowing you to choose your own investments.
You may want to choose an app that lets you steer the ship yourself, particularly if you want to take a DIY approach to your investments at some point.
Step 2: Input your information.
Once you’ve chosen a micro investing app, it’s time to let the robo-advisor do its job. You input information to your micro investing app that helps it “understand” how to put together the best portfolio for you. You input your age, income, goals and risk tolerance and it’ll allocate your investment dollars accordingly.
Your money will go into a portfolio of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) based on the level of risk you choose. Based on the information you supply, you could end up thoroughly diversified with shares in many (sometimes hundreds) of different companies.
Step 3: Set up recurring investments.
You can set up investments to go into your investment account on a recurring basis for just a few dollars per month. You can also choose to make one-time deposits. Your robo-advisor will automatically rebalance your account if you have too much invested in a particular asset class. Setting up recurring investing means that you’ll invest without thinking about it. (You’ll never miss pennies!)
Step 4: Don’t quit there.
You can easily track your earnings when you micro invest because those apps are seriously slick. You can even project your earnings through the app’s earnings calculator so you don’t have to wonder how much you’ll have later on.
However, this is important: Remember that micro investing may not make you rich (if, in fact that is your goal). You probably can’t save enough for retirement through micro-investing, either. You probably also won’t net enough to save for larger goals, such as a down payment on a home. You may generate a few hundred dollars a year, which might allow you to save enough to fund an emergency fund, but that’s about it.
The real win involves building the confidence needed to invest. Consider other ways you can invest, such as investing money in a 401(k) or a Roth IRA after you get comfortable with micro investing.
Micro Investing Could Work Wonders
Micro investing can work wonders by breaking down barriers to investing. One of the biggest complaints from young students just starting out is that it’s too expensive to invest.
Micro investing can give you or a new grad the confidence to try bigger things, starting with baby steps. If micro investing is what it takes for a new grad to get more comfortable with smaller investments (then grow investments later), then it’s a great option for young investors just getting started.
Microfinance is a category of financial services targeting individuals and small businesses who lack access to conventional banking and related services. Microfinance includes microcredit, the provision of small loans to poor clients; savings and checking accounts; microinsurance; and payment systems, among other services. Microfinance services are designed to reach excluded customers, usually poorer population segments, possibly socially marginalized, or geographically more isolated, and to help them become self-sufficient.[2][3]
Microfinance initially had a limited definition: the provision of microloans to poor entrepreneurs and small businesses lacking access to credit.[4] The two main mechanisms for the delivery of financial services to such clients were: (1) relationship-based banking for individual entrepreneurs and small businesses; and (2) group-based models, where several entrepreneurs come together to apply for loans and other services as a group.
Over time, microfinance has emerged as a larger movement whose object is: “a world in which as everyone, especially the poor and socially marginalized people and households have access to a wide range of affordable, high quality financial products and services, including not just credit but also savings, insurance, payment services, and fund transfers.
Proponents of microfinance often claim that such access will help poor people out of poverty, including participants in the Microcredit Summit Campaign. For many, microfinance is a way to promote economic development, employment and growth through the support of micro-entrepreneurs and small businesses; for others it is a way for the poor to manage their finances more effectively and take advantage of economic opportunities while managing the risks. Critics often point to some of the ills of micro-credit that can create indebtedness. Many studies have tried to assess its impacts.
New research in the area of microfinance call for better understanding of the microfinance ecosystem so that the microfinance institutions and other facilitators can formulate sustainable strategies that will help create social benefits through better service delivery to the low-income population.
Due to the unbalanced emphasis on credit at the expense of microsavings, as well as a desire to link Western investors to the sector, peer-to-peer platforms have developed to expand the availability of microcredit through individual lenders in the developed world. New platforms that connect lenders to micro-entrepreneurs are emerging on the Web (peer-to-peer sponsors), for example MYC4, Kiva, Zidisha, myELEN, Opportunity International and the Microloan Foundation.
Another Web-based microlender United Prosperity uses a variation on the usual microlending model; with United Prosperity the micro-lender provides a guarantee to a local bank which then lends back double that amount to the micro-entrepreneur. In 2009, the US-based nonprofit Zidisha became the first peer-to-peer microlending platform to link lenders and borrowers directly across international borders without local intermediaries.
Money is the engine of the economy. It is the facilitator of trade and specialization. However, few people ask themselves: where does our money come from? This article discusses the process of money creation at banks and central banks. The analysis is based on the respective balance sheet.
How the Federal Reserve creates money out of thin air — a balance sheet analysis
This section shows how money is created at the Federal Reserve (Fed), the central bank of the United States. The Fed acts as the bank for the government and as bank for other commercial banks. The Federal Reserve is known to be the “lender of last resort” with the ability to bail out commercial banks. The following analysis is based on the balance sheet of all Federal Reserve Banks combined as published in the annual report 2019 by the Federal Reserve.
The balance sheet of the Fed consists of assets on the one side and liabilities on the other side — just as any company’s balance sheet. The sum of all assets must always be equal to the sum of all liabilities. This is based on the concept of double entry bookkeeping which requires two entries in the balance sheet for every transaction. Assume you are keeping a balance sheet for your personal finances. When you go shopping and pay with cash for food, then there are two entries: a reduction in cash and an increase in food. This fact of every transaction requiring two entries will be important in the further analysis.
Treasury securities and the general account of the treasury
First, we discuss the entries of the Fed’s balance sheet relating to treasury. On the asset side there are „Treasury securities“. On the liability side there is the entry „Treasury, general account“. Treasury securities are bonds issued by the government with varying length and interest rate. The Federal Reserve Bank bought more and more of these government bonds over time thereby providing funding to the government. In 2019, the Fed has claims on the government of more than USD 2.4 trillion. The government is expected to pay this sum with future tax payments by the people since this is the major revenue stream of governments.
But how did the Federal Reserve fund the money for buying government bonds? By creating it out of thin air. Here comes the double entry bookkeeping into play. On the liabilities side, we find the operational account of the treasury which sums up to USD 403 billion. We see that the Fed can easily create new money by expanding the credit sheet. The book value of the government bonds is placed under „treasury securities“ as assets . This process involves an intermediary bank that buys the government bond from the government which is then sold to the Federal Reserve. Thus, the process is in fact even more complex. An illustration of the process can be found in the end of the article.
The central bank also creates money by issuing a credit to banks. The value of the loan is noted on the asset side of the central bank and the money loaned is added to the deposit account of the bank on the liabilities side.The process is explained in the figure below.
Money creation through debt issuance (central banks)
The government may issue unlimited amounts of government debt and thereby finance its activities. The Fed may infinitely buy government bonds thereby closely collaborating with the government. The annual report states that any surplus of the Fed’s income is transferred to the Treasury which clearly lines out that the Fed works for the government (see screenshot below). In contrast, any company who takes on more and more debt would face higher interest rates due to increased risk. At a certain stage, the company would not be able to take on more debt. On the other side, the government can loan money infinitely through collusion with the Fed who buys treasury securities to the lowest interest rate.
Federal Reserve, annual report 2019, p. 15
Federal Reserve Notes
Printing new money can be either exercised through book money or by literally printing new money, i.e. Federal Reserve notes. The annual report of the Fed says that “Federal Reserve notes are obligations of the United States government“ which means that by holding a Federal Reserve note one owns a claim on future tax payments — this concept lies at the heart of government backed money. Essentially, the taxpayer is the collateral for Federal Reserve notes. In 2019, the Federal Reserve notes outstanding accumulate to more than USD 1.7 trillion.
The statement „The Federal Reserve system after 50 years” by the Committee on Banking and Currency
Mortgage-backed securities in the Federal Reserve balance sheet
We have discussed the most important entry on the balance sheet of the Federal Reserve which is the claim on the government bonds on the asset side and the general account of the treasury on the liability side. The Federal Reserve, however, does not only hold government bonds as collateral for the Federal Reserve notes. The second largest entry on the assets side of the Fed’s balance sheet are mortgage-backed securities. The entry „Federal Agency and Government-Sponsored Enterprise Mortgage-Backed Securities“ comprises purchases of mortgage-backed securities from “government-sponsored enterprises” such as the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) & Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac). This means that the Fed owns the claims on house owners’ debt obligations. In general, the buyer of a mortgage-backed security (MBS) has a claim on the real estate in case of credit default. So in case of defaulting MBS, the ownership of the real estate is transferred to the Federal Reserve Bank.
But where did the Federal Reserve receive the funds for buying MBS? The central bank may simply create the money to buy assets as discussed in an article from the Bank of England. The central bank does so by adding the value of the assets on the asset side of the balance sheet and by inserting the funds for the assets to the seller’s bank account. Quantitative Easing works according to the same principle: The central bank buys government bonds from other banks thereby creating the funds out of thin air. The bank accounts can be found in the row “Depository institutions“ which is further explained in the next section.
Money creation through asset purchases (central banks)
Bank accounts at the Fed and the reserve requirement
Banks are obliged to hold a certain percentage of their liabilities as reserve at the central bank called “reserve requirement”. The reserve requirement of all banks combined is noted in the row “Depository institutions” on the liability side of the central bank. The central bank primarily holds government bonds and MBS as a reserve for the banks’ deposits. This means that the people’s savings are not more secure with higher reserve requirements since these savings are backed by not necessarily “safer” investments. Essentially, savings can be only considered “safe” when assuming unlimited bank bailouts.
In 2019, the total sum of bank deposits at the Fed accounted for more than USD 1.5 trillion. The percentage of reserves banks need to hold in reserve at central banks is set by central banks. In March 26, 2020 this percentage was set to zero. This means that banks are not required to hold any money in reserves for the debt they give out. However, for being able to serve the claims of customers, they should hold a certain amount of money as reserve. The amount of money which banks hold at central banks that exceed the minimum reserve is called “excess reserve”. The Fed has not charged negative interest rate for excess reserves yet but the ECB has already started to do so. This means that banks holding money at the ECB have to pay for doing so. This puts great strain on banks so they have an incentive to give out more debt to make money from the debt related interest.
Can commercial banks create money individually out of thin air?
There is an ongoing discussion on whether commercial banks may create money individually out of thin air in the process of credit creation. This section first discusses the theoretical background followed by empirical evidence supporting the hypothesis that commercial banks create money out of thin air. It also reflects the view of central banks, which clearly shows that banks can create money from nothing.
Banks as custody providers and investment vehicles
The theoretical part refers to Rothbard’s analysis on money creation in his book „Man, Economy, and State with Power and Market“ first published in 1962, page 801 forth following. Rothbard started his argumentation with banks acting as custody providers during the gold standard which means that gold was used as a currency (in contrast to government-backed fiat money which is essentially backed by future tax payments).
Rothbard explains the concept of money creation with the hypothetical example of the „Star Bank“ offering custody services to the public. For storing 5000 ounces of gold, the bank issued warehouse receipts covering exactly 5000 ounces.
Balance sheet of Star Bank
Now the bank decided to perform investments with their clients’ money to increase their revenue. The bank lends out the saver’s money to others, in turn the bank offers an interest rate to their customers. The bank now acts as an investment vehicle. Since the savers want to withdraw their money every now and then, the bank holds some gold in reserve. This gold in reserve is not used for investment purposes. So the bank acts as both: custody provider and investment vehicle.
If more people want to withdraw their money than the bank has reserves, then the bank goes bankrupt. This happened in the past in so-called „bank runs“. This problem could have been mitigated by the bank clearly separating their business as investment vehicle and as custody provider. In such a scenario, the customer can decide which portion of his money he aims to invest and get interest for and which portion of the money he aims to place in custody where he needs to pay custody fees for the service. Also, the bank should be required to be transparent about which investments the people’s money flows to, which is not the case in the current financial system.
The process of money creation through credit creation at commercial banks
In the process of credit creation, an entry on the asset side of the balance sheet is created depicting the claim of the bank on the debtor. Since the system is based upon double entry bookkeeping, a corresponding entry is required. This means that the money that is lent out has to come from somewhere.
The process of credit creation is explained with another example of the Star Bank illustrated in the screenshot below. The asset side shows that 5000 ounces are kept in custody and 1000 ounces of gold were given out to debtors (I.O.U’s from Debtors — I.O.U. refers to “I owe you”). The liability side shows that warehouse receipts worth 6000 ounces of gold were given out. We assume that exactly 1000 ounces more gold were inserted by customers which was then lent out. This means that the debt money originates from the savers depositing their money in the bank. So, the money was merely shifted from saver to debtor where the bank acts as financial intermediary.
Balance sheet of Star Bank
This is no problem when the bank first asks their customers whether they agree with this particular investment because in the end, these customers bear the risk of default. The bank becomes the investment vehicle and intermediary for this particular transaction.
But what if the bank creates more warehouse receipts than the total sum of the gold the bank holds in custody and the gold lent out? This is „the creation of new money out of thin air, by issuing receipts for nonexistent gold“ which is called „monetization of debt“ (Rothbard, 1962, p. 809). We use the example above, however, now assuming that the bank created 1000 pseudo warehouse receipts that are not covered by gold. In fact there are only 5000 ounces of gold but the bank acts as if there were 6000 ounces of gold by giving out 6000 pseudo warehouse receipts. In the process of lending out money, 1000 new warehouse receipts were created which are not covered by gold. These are fake money certificates created in the process of debt issuance. So essentially, the bank has issued more money certificates than it can actually redeem. If more customers claim their gold than the bank holds in custody, then the bank goes bankrupt if it is not bailed out.
According to Rothbard „It is, in fact, difficult to see the economic or moral difference between the issuance of pseudo receipts and the appropriation of someone else’s property or outright embezzlement or, more directly, counterfeiting. Most present legal systems do not outlaw this practice; in fact, it is considered basic banking procedure.“ (Rothbard, 1962, p. 809)
When banks engage in fraudulent behavior, they would normally lose customers. Also, other banks would stop lending money to the fraudulent bank. This allows sound checks between banks on their risk and credibility. This was stopped through the nationwide check-clearing system called „Federal Reserve“ which can bail out even the most fraudulent bank. The Federal Reserve published a document explaining its purposes and functions which says the following:
„By creating the Federal Reserve System, Congress intended to eliminate the severe financial crises that had periodically swept the nation, especially the sort of financial panic that occurred in 1907. During that episode, payments were disrupted throughout the country because many banks and clearinghouses refused to clear checks drawn on certain other banks, a practice that contributed to the failure of otherwise solvent banks [Note author: if the banks were solvent they would not need a bailout]. To address these problems, Congress gave the Federal Reserve System the authority to establish a nationwide check-clearing system.“ (Source: Federal Reserve System Publication, Purposes and Functions)
For evidence on whether commercial banks may individually create money out of thin air, we may either look into the source code of the banking system or we look at empirical data. The source code is unfortunately undisclosed. So we may only look at empirical data.
Empirical study on whether commercial banks may create money out of thin air
This section refers to the study “Can banks individually create money out of nothing? — The theories and the empirical evidence“ by Professor Richard Werner. In this study, the cooperating bank granted a loan of 200 000 EUR of maturity under 4 years to Richard Werner. A snapshot of the balance sheet was taken before the transfer and on the next day when the transaction was completed. The study showed the following balance sheet movements of the „Raiffeisenbank”:
Asset side of the balance sheetLiability side of the balance sheet
We see an increase of around 170 000 EUR on the liability side in the entry „claims by customers“. This entry corresponds to the „pseudo warehouse receipts“ in the analysis of Rothbard. It is quite unlikely that customers inserted so much money as savings on the day regarded. But what else could have moved this entry so much? Let’s remember the mechanism of how central banks created new money — maybe a similar mechanism is applied with commercial banks. Central banks create new money by recording the issued loan as an asset on the asset side and by entering the corresponding money into the banks’ accounts. Commercial banks could make use of the same principle: They can note the loan amount on the asset side and insert this money in the bank account of the debtor. In this process, the credit sum would be added to both sides of the balance sheet: the “claims on customers” on the asset side (the debt) and the “claims by customers” on the liability side of the bank (the loaned money).
A snapshot directly before and after the transaction would have given us more clarity but this is the best to work with for now. The 170 000 EUR of increase in claims by customers is close to the credit sum but does not cover it entirely. So let’s have a look at the other major movements on the balance sheet. Apart from the increase in the claims by customers, we see an increase in cash on the asset side and a decrease in „claims on financial institutions“. This indicates that other banks paid the debt they had with the „Raiffeisenbank“. Since we do not have the balance sheet of all customers and debtors of the Raiffeisenbank, it is not possible to say with absolute clarity which transaction was a pseudo transaction and which was not. But we can have a look at what the central authorities say on Money creation.
Central banks’ view on money creation in the banking system
Both articles have found that banks and central banks create money by issuing debt. More precisely, the debt is noted on the asset side as a claim on the debtor and the related money is inserted in the deposit account of the debtor. This fits very well to what was explained above.
Money creation through debt issuance (banks)
Both articles have found another mean for money creation namely in the process of buying assets. When a bank or central bank buys an asset, the asset is placed on the asset side of the balance sheet and the related money is placed in the account of the seller of the asset on the liability side.
Money creation through asset purchases (banks)
Concluding, we have great evidence that both banks and central banks create money out of thin air in the process of credit creation and also in the process of asset purchases.
Next, we look at the occurrence of pseudo receipts in history.
Pseudo receipts in the history of money
The most prominent case of pseudo receipts happened during the Bretton Woods System which was in place from 1944 to 1971. In this time period, the US dollar was fixed to gold at USD 35 per ounce of gold. All other currencies were in turn fixed to the US Dollar. The Federal Reserve held the gold in reserve to which the US dollar was pegged to. This means that the Federal Reserve was the only custody provider that held the gold in reserve which is an extreme centralization of trust. Everyone trusted that the Federal Reserve does not create pseudo warehouse receipts, i.e. more US dollars than are covered by the gold reserves. In the 1960s, the first speculators did not trust the Fed anymore and assumed that more US dollars were created than there were gold reserves. This has led to a revaluation of currencies and eventually to the collapse of the Bretton Wood System. Now, the US dollar is pegged to nothing and the Fed may print infinitely.
Note: Here you find one source on Bretton Woods (notice the framing „speculative attacks“ and „confidence problem“ by the public instead of „deception“ and „fraud“ committed by the Fed).
Money alternatives that cannot be created out of thin air
We learned that depositing one’s money in service custody allows the custody provider to easily instigate fraudulent behavior by issuing fake warehouse receipts. We can prevent this by holding our assets in self-custody. But which alternative money is most suitable for self-custody? In the following, Bitcoin and gold are compared as money alternatives.
Bitcoin can be sent over distance almost immediately without a third party. Gold either requires physical shipping which is very slow and comes with a great risk of losing the funds or the gold is held in service custody and merely the ownership is shifted. Storing one’s money in custody requires trust in the custody provider to not issue pseudo receipts. Bitcoin in turn can be held by the individual and can be sent over distance directly to the recipient. Bitcoin does not depend on a trusted centralized authority — Bitcoin is trustless. Moreover, if bitcoin are stored at a custody provider who gives every customer a separate Bitcoin address, then the customer may verify whether the bitcoins are still there 24/7 over the network. This is why Bitcoin is superior over gold even in the situation of custody.
According to Bloomberg, central banks have bought more and more gold just recently. Some people are arguing that the government may introduce a new coin that is backed by gold when the fiat system crashes. But wait! Didn’t the central banks create more US dollars than there was gold in reserve during the Bretton Woods System? Yes. If your government says that a new fiat is issued which is backed by gold where gold is stored in a centralized custody, why should you trust them not to create pseudo receipts if they did so in the past?
Bitcoin is the way out.
Central banks buying gold
I would like to thank Murray Rothbard for his extraordinary logic in laying out the concept of money and its creation. I also thank Professor Richard Werner for conducting the empirical study on money creation at commercial banks. Great thanks to my proofreaders Ben Kaufman, Keyvan Davani and Márton Csernai. I highly appreciate your support in improving this article. Any feedback from subsequent readers is highly welcome!
Note on fractional reserve banking
It is important to differentiate between two different definitions of fractional reserve banking:
Reserve refers to the percentage of money held in custody which is not lent out. So, a portion of the savers money is held in custody (reserve) and the rest is invested.
Reserve refers to the percentage of money actually covered by the underlying asset. Gold standard: Only a portion of the money certificates is backed with the underlying asset, the rest are pseudo warehouse receipts. Fiat system: The bank may create money in the process of debt issuance.
Note that with fiat money, it is difficult to differentiate money and money substitutes because both are based on nothing and essentially fake. This is why the definition “money may be created in the debt issuance process” is used.
In a monetary system where money cannot be created through accounting fraud in the process of debt issuance, debt and credit simply show the obligations between people. In such a system, money would be distributed from e.g. the savers account to the debtors account where the bank acts as financial intermediary (see first example by Rothbard in this article). So, fractional reserve banking as per the first definition does not lead to more money created. However, money in custody and money invested should be clearly separated thereby laying on a sound monetary system that is scarce. Bitcoin enables this.
The implications of the second system where money may be created out of thin air by banks and central banks have found deep consideration in the article. We have strong evidence that banks and in particular central banks create new money in the process of debt issuance through accounting fraud. Even the reserves behind the central bank money, which among other things consists of the banks’ minimum reserves, can be used by the central banks for risky investments, which makes the whole concept of minimum reserves ad absurdum. We may conclude that both definitions of Fractional Reserve Banking hold in the current system. The first concept of Fractional Reserve Banking is organic to a sound monetary system. The latter is inorganic and can be only facilitated with fraud or unsound money coming with great distortions to the economy.
Note on whether fiat money is debt or money
Emil Sandstedt brought up the very interesting question on whether fiat money is money or debt during our Podcast with Keyvan Davani. I would consider fiat money as both: debt and money and I lay out why in the following.
Federal Reserve notes are per definition part of the “monetary base” which is the most superior money. Money is in fact differentiated into certain categories (monetary base, M1, M2, M3). So, Federal Reserve notes are money in the narrow sense. In general, the longer the deposit maturity of a savings deposit, the lower its rank in the monetary hierarchy per definition. However, Federal Reserve notes are a claim on future tax payments (see chapter Federal Reserve Notes). Since future tax payments are a form of debt, Federal Reserve Notes can be considered both: money and debt.
Per definition, the other forms of debt generated through credit creation are not considered money in the fiat system but rather as a “counterpart of M3”. On the other side, one can buy things with the money that one received through the credit. So this money can be used as a medium of exchange. This is a reason why this debt can be considered “money”.
This article has not focused on this differentiation for reasons of simplicity. In the end, what one calls calls “money” is based on definitions. Since money created through debt issuance can be used for payments, it is valid to consider it as money as it was done in this article. But also, it is justified to call central bank money as debt since these are a claims on future tax payments — claims on debt. Therefore, I like the term “debt money” implicating that the fiat system is based on debt and that this money is used as a medium of exchange.
Interesting side note: Only central bank money is considered money by government decree.
Illustration of quantitative easing
Quantitative easing involves the purchase of government bonds by the central bank. But the treasuries are first sold to the secondary market. In the process below the treasury is first bought by a pension fund, then by a bank called “Citibank” and then by the Federal Reserve. Alexander Bechtel explains this process very well in this video.
QE step 1QE step 2QE step 3
By Stefanie von Jan / Freedom and truth seeker, economist for a free market for money, deep into Austrian Economics and Bitcoin, advocate for safe and beneficial technologies
A brief look at how money has evolved over time from being printed on valuable substances (commodity money), to merely representing those valuable substances (commodity-backed money), to not representing anything at all (fiat money). Created by Grant Sanderson. View more lessons or practice this subject at http://www.khanacademy.org/economics-… AP Macroeconomics on Khan Academy: Welcome to Economics! In this lesson we’ll define Economic and introduce some of the fundamental tools and perspectives economists use to understand the world around us!
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