The post The global economy is still paying for big banks’ laziness appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Disclosure: The views and opinions expressed here belongThe post The global economy is still paying for big banks’ laziness appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Disclosure: The views and opinions expressed here belong

The global economy is still paying for big banks’ laziness

2025/12/13 17:33

Disclosure: The views and opinions expressed here belong solely to the author and do not represent the views and opinions of crypto.news’ editorial.

Financial institutions and big banks have had a decade to experiment with crypto rails for cross-border and interbank settlement. They could’ve run pilots, built internal expertise, and designed compliant models ready for real-world deployment once regulators gave the nod. They didn’t.

Summary

  • Banks had a decade to build blockchain-based settlement rails but largely failed to act, leaving the world stuck with slow, costly legacy systems that impose unnecessary economic friction.
  • Blockchain collapses settlement times, rewrites liquidity dynamics, and unlocks real-time capital mobility — benefits already proven in crypto markets and especially impactful for emerging economies.
  • Until financial institutions adopt these rails at scale, businesses and consumers will keep paying the price for avoidable delays, idle capital, and outdated infrastructure.

A few exceptions (such as JPMorgan’s Onyx project, now rebranded as Kinexys) proved that institutional blockchain settlement could work. But those efforts remain isolated cases, not the industry standard. When regulators finally cleared the runway, the industry should have hit launch with production-ready solutions. That inaction now costs the world economy billions in unnecessary friction. We all keep paying the price for banks’ reliance on legacy infrastructure that moves money at a crawl in the Internet age.

The cost of indolence

Traditional finance is rife with inefficiencies. Securities settlement queues, bank cut-off times, and even routine foreign exchange trades still move at a multi-day pace. Each of those delays is effectively a fee on capital, a hidden cost paid in the form of idle funds sitting in intermediary accounts. That capital could be earning yield, financing new ventures, or compounding in other markets.

In my native Brazil, for example, retail cross-border payments often pass through offshore bank branches (frequently in the Caribbean) before reaching destinations in the United States, Europe, or even other Latin American nations. Each additional checkpoint adds cost, time, and compliance complexity. For retail users, this delay translates directly into higher fees. For institutions, it’s a drag on liquidity and capital efficiency.

If it takes longer to settle, you can bet that someone, somewhere, is paying for that delay. Just as risk in credit markets translates directly into interest rates, inefficiency in payments is priced into spreads and fees.

Banks know this. They should’ve jumped at the opportunity to streamline the system, even if just to get a leg up on their competitors. Why didn’t they?

“Smart contract risk” will fade away

At the turn of the millennium, analysts routinely factored “internet risk” into their models, referring to the possibility that online infrastructure could fail and disrupt entire operations. Two decades later, no valuation model includes a line item for “internet risk,” even though a single day offline could cost billions. The internet simply became an assumed infrastructure.

The same evolution will happen to blockchains. Pricing “smart contract risk” into a business model in 2030 will sound as outdated as pricing “email risk” today. Once security audits, insurance standards, and redundancy frameworks mature, the default assumption will flip: blockchains won’t be seen as a risk, but as the infrastructure that mitigates it.

Liquidity premium rewritten by capital’s new velocity

The financial system’s inefficiencies translate into opportunity costs for investors. 

In traditional private equity or venture capital, investors are locked in for 10–20 years before seeing liquidity. In the crypto sector, tokens often vest in a fraction of the time, and once they do, they trade freely on global liquid markets (exchanges, OTC desks, DeFi platforms), collapsing what used to be a multi-stage process of VC, growth, and private equity rounds followed by an IPO.

Even more interesting, unvested tokens can sometimes be staked to earn yield or used as collateral in structured operations, even while remaining non-transferable. 

In other words, the value that would sit idle in traditional finance keeps circulating in web3. The concept of a “liquidity premium”, meaning the extra return investors demand for holding illiquid assets, starts to erode when assets can be fractionally unlocked or re-hypothecated in real time.

The difference made by blockchain technology is also felt in fixed income and private credit markets as well. Traditional bonds pay semiannual coupons and private credit operations dole out monthly interest, whereas on-chain yields accrue every few seconds, block by block. 

And in traditional finance, meeting a margin call might take days as collateral moves through custodians and clearinghouses. In decentralized finance, collateral moves instantly. When the crypto market suffered its biggest nominal liquidation event in October 2025, the onchain ecosystem programmatically settled billions in capital within hours. The same efficiency was on display in other crypto black swan events, such as the Terra collapse. 

Blockchains change the game for developing nations

Emerging economies bear the brunt of the banking sector’s inefficiencies. Brazilians, for instance, can’t hold foreign currency directly in local bank accounts. That means any international payment automatically involves a foreign exchange step. 

Worse, Latin American FX pairs must often settle through the U.S. dollar as an intermediary. If you want to convert your Brazilian reals (BRL) to Chilean pesos (CLP), you need two trades: BRL to USD, then USD to CLP. Each leg adds spread and delay. Blockchain technology, by contrast, enables BRL and CLP stablecoins to settle directly onchain.

Legacy systems also impose strict cut-off times. In Brazil, same-day (T+0) FX operations generally must close between noon and 1 p.m. local time. Miss that window, and extra spreads and time apply. Even T+1 trades have end-of-day cut-offs around 4 p.m. For businesses operating across time zones, this makes true real-time settlement impossible. Since blockchains operate 24/7, they remove that limitation entirely.

These are concrete examples of the problems that banks could’ve fixed years ago already. And bear in mind that Brazil didn’t face the same pushback on crypto from lawmakers as the United States did. There is no excuse for these problems to still be troubling us.

The world of finance has always priced waiting as risk, rightfully so. Blockchain minimizes that risk by collapsing the time between transaction and settlement. The ability to free and reallocate capital instantaneously is a paradigm shift. But banks are depriving their customers of these benefits for no good reason.

Until banks, payments companies, and financial service providers fully embrace blockchain-based settlement, the global economy will continue to pay for their laziness. And in a world where time is yielding, that bill compounds larger every day.

Thiago Rüdiger

Thiago Rüdiger is the CEO of the Tanssi Foundation, where he oversees ecosystem growth and decentralization for Tanssi’s modular blockchain infrastructure.

Source: https://crypto.news/the-global-economy-is-paying-for-big-banks-laziness/

Piyasa Fırsatı
BIG Logosu
BIG Fiyatı(BIG)
$0.0001979
$0.0001979$0.0001979
-12.58%
USD
BIG (BIG) Canlı Fiyat Grafiği
Sorumluluk Reddi: Bu sitede yeniden yayınlanan makaleler, halka açık platformlardan alınmıştır ve yalnızca bilgilendirme amaçlıdır. MEXC'nin görüşlerini yansıtmayabilir. Tüm hakları telif sahiplerine aittir. Herhangi bir içeriğin üçüncü taraf haklarını ihlal ettiğini düşünüyorsanız, kaldırılması için lütfen [email protected] ile iletişime geçin. MEXC, içeriğin doğruluğu, eksiksizliği veya güncelliği konusunda hiçbir garanti vermez ve sağlanan bilgilere dayalı olarak alınan herhangi bir eylemden sorumlu değildir. İçerik, finansal, yasal veya diğer profesyonel tavsiye niteliğinde değildir ve MEXC tarafından bir tavsiye veya onay olarak değerlendirilmemelidir.

Ayrıca Şunları da Beğenebilirsiniz

Binance Whale Loses $11.58 Million as Bitcoin Crashes Below $86,000

Binance Whale Loses $11.58 Million as Bitcoin Crashes Below $86,000

A major trader on Binance suffered an $11.58 million liquidation on a BTC/USDT long position as Bitcoin plunged below the $86,000 level. The entire position was wiped out in a single order, demonstrating the unforgiving nature of leveraged cryptocurrency trading during periods of intense selling pressure.
Paylaş
MEXC NEWS2025/12/16 14:39
Tom Lee: Crypto's Best Years Lie Ahead as Adoption Gap Reveals Massive Growth Potential

Tom Lee: Crypto's Best Years Lie Ahead as Adoption Gap Reveals Massive Growth Potential

Tom Lee, co-founder and head of research at Fundstrat Global Advisors, has offered a compelling framework for understanding Bitcoin's growth runway. His analysis centers on a stark comparison: only 4 million Bitcoin wallets currently hold $10,000 or more, while approximately 900 million IRA and brokerage accounts globally contain at least that amount.
Paylaş
MEXC NEWS2025/12/16 14:46
Solana’s (SOL) Recent Rally May Impress, But Investors Targeting Life-Changing ROI Are Looking Elsewhere

Solana’s (SOL) Recent Rally May Impress, But Investors Targeting Life-Changing ROI Are Looking Elsewhere

The post Solana’s (SOL) Recent Rally May Impress, But Investors Targeting Life-Changing ROI Are Looking Elsewhere appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Solana’s (SOL) latest rally has attracted investors from all over, but the bigger story for vision-minded investors is where the next surges of life-altering returns are heading.  As Solana continues to see high levels of ecosystem usage and network utilization, the stage is slowly being set for Mutuum Finance (MUTM).  MUTM is priced at $0.035 in its fast-growing presale. Price appreciation of 14.3% is what the investors are going to anticipate in the next phase. Over $15.85 million has been raised as the presale keeps gaining momentum. Unlike the majority of the tokens surfing short-term waves of hype, Mutuum Finance is becoming a utility-focused choice with more value potential and therefore an increasingly better option for investors looking for more than price action alone. Solana Maintains Gains Near $234 As Speculation Persists Solana (SOL) is trading at $234.08 currently, holding its 24hr range around $234.42 to $248.19 as it illustrates the recent trend. The token has recorded strong seven-day gains of nearly 13%, far exceeding most of its peers, as it is supported by rising volume and institutional buying. Resistance is at $250-$260, and support appears to be at $220-$230, and thus these are significant levels for potential breakout or pullback.  However, new DeFi crypto Mutuum Finance, is being considered by market watchers to have more upside potential, being still in presale.  Mutuum Finance Phase 6 Presale Mutuum Finance is currently in Presale Stage 6 and offering tokens for $0.035. Presale has been going on very fast, and investors have raised over $15.85 million. The project also looks forward to a USD-pegged stablecoin on the Ethereum blockchain for convenient payments and as a keeper of long-term value. Mutuum Finance is a dual-lending, multi-purpose DeFi platform that benefits borrowers and lenders alike. It provides the network to retail as well as…
Paylaş
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 06:23