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Smart contracts: leaving the gravel road behindCover slide example
John Kingston: Director of Global
Market Insights, S&P Global
James Rilett: Global Director of
Innovation, S&P Global Platts
Blockchain in Oil & Gas, Houston,
September 12, 2017
Copyright © 2017 by S&P Global.
All rights reserved.
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Why now? What is so special about this technology?
It is creating new
commercial constructs:
• Immutable, shared
records and audit
trails
• Digital Assets
• Smart ContractsNo content below the line
Cryptography &
Digital Signatures
Programable logic &
Immutable data
Distributed
processing &
consensus
DLT
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Key features of a smart contract
Private & Confidential 3
• Predates blockchain. Nick Szabo in 1998: “a set of promises, specified
in digital form, including protocols within which the parties perform on
these promises.”
• Current definition assumes DLT
• No need to actively maintain or monitor by some sort of central authority
• External data to be supplied by an oracle
A programmer is going to the grocery store and his wife tells him, "Buy a gallon of milk, and if there are eggs, then buy a dozen." So the programmer goes, buys everything, and drives back to his house. Upon arrival, his wife angrily asks him, "Why did you get 13 gallons of milk?" The programmer says, "There were eggs!"
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What is this graphic telling us?
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Online commerce vs. smart contract
• The contract popup…shows you you’re still in Kansas
• The location of the database…distributed vs. central
• Who can hit the “stop” button?
• Who grants the approval to the transaction?
PLATTS
INNOVATION
Example of physical commodity trading contract
Trading physical commodities today is expensive and slow – with many
cumbersome processes that haven’t moved on since they were
invented.
‣ Manual paperwork
‣ Bilateral terms (never the
same)
‣ Process pain & prework
‣ Reconciliation costs
‣ Compliance burden
Trade P&L ($)
Trade profit + 430,000
Middle & back
office costs
- 15,000
Finance
charges
Dispute
resolution
costs
-2,000,000
NET PROFIT ??
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The multi trillion dollar commodities trade finance industry adds to the process
‣ (more) manual paperwork
‣ LCs de-risk buyer
performance…but at considerable
cost
‣ And enforce reliance on archaic
title documentation and process…
Trade P&L ($)
Trade profit + 430,000
Middle & back
office costs
- 10,000
Finance
charges
-100,00
Dispute
resolution
costs
-2,000,000
NET PROFIT ??
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Risk of fraud
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‣ Easily forged paperwork
‣ Opaque tracking of goods
Trade P&L ($)
Trade profit + 430,000
Middle &
back office
costs
- 15,000
Finance
charges
-- 100,000
Dispute
resolution
costs
-2,000,000
NET PROFIT
(Loss)
----
1,687,000
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Manual price input
Reconciliation post deal
Manual submission to PRA - email or phone
Immutable market price (Oracle) for both
parties
Seamless participation in price
assessment (high confidence for PRA)
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Rare to find a true standard specQuality adjustment calculation &
negotiation to trade on index Post delivery adjustments
Automated pricing adjustment
Automated settlement penalty
Trade any spec. vs index
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Manual entry of buyer name Payment history check Financial standing research Issuing bank reputation check
Integrated credit rating
Integrated payment history
Automated risk exclusions
Smart Escrow!
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Sellers’ burden of self attestation
Manual entry of seller name
Contingent pre-work
Automated & integrated taxonomy
PreQualified counterparties
Demonstrate performance history
Networked KYC lowers costs
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Painfully manual Seamlessly low risk
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But is it all that simple?
• Who is in charge of a permissioned ledger?
• Where will the funding come from for operating a
permissioned ledger?
• Trading companies at the forefront; can that continue?
• Are there some areas where DLT will not be better than
what exists now?
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But are smart contracts legal contracts?
From Contracte Ex Machina (Wharton via Duke Law Journal)
“Do smart contracts constitute promises or agreements that are intended
to be legally enforceable?”
“Contract law is a remedial institution. Its aim is not to ensure
performance ex ante, but to adjudicate the grievances that may arise ex
post. Smart contracts bring into sharper relief this core function of
contract law. They eliminate the act of remediation, by admitting no
possibility of breach. The needs that gave rise to contract law do not,
however, disappear.”
The online “contract”: still dependent on humans. Still requires trust of
the “state.” “Substitute, rather than screens in front of it.”
Disputes: should be fewer; immutable shared records of what happened
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A skeptical view
• Defies logic to think there won’t be ex post disputes in a smart contract
• Will a permissioned blockchain have an arbitration method/dispute resolution mechanism that stops short of litigation?
• Does the inclusion of flexibility mechanisms take away from the stated goals of the smart contract?
• The legal concerns of oracles, who are not part of the transaction
• Wharton: “They may look more like so-called gentlemen’s agreements—intended to be carried out but never intended to reach a courtroom.”
• “We think that contract litigation plays a role in our social system that smart contracts do not even purport to replicate.”
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Thank you
John Kingston
Director of Global Market Insights
T: 212.438.1264
James Rilett
Director of Innovation, S&P Global
Platts
T: +44 7502 333830
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