18.04.2024

Fidelity Digital Assets to Consider Rolling Out Ether Support in 2020

Fidelity’s cryptocurrency trading – and custody – platform launched with a select group of clients in March. The platform is not meant for retail investors. Instead, it focuses on hedge funds, family offices, pensions, endowments, other institutional investors. 

Tom Jessop, the president of Fidelity Digital Assets, the cryptocurrency trading arm of United States financial services giant Fidelity, announced that the firm may add support for Ether (ETH) in 2020 is there is sufficient demand for it.

During an interview with industry news outlet TheBlock published on Dec. 13, Jessop answered questions about the firm.

When asked about the possibility Fidelity Digital Asset may support Ether in the future, he said:

“We’ve done a lot of work on Ethereum. We intend to support it in the New Year. We’re very led by our clients.”

Institutional crypto adoption

Jessop also said that the main obstacles to institutional crypto adoption are price volatility, lack of regulatory clarity, and perhaps most importantly, absence of track record. He explained that he believes these problems will be alleviated with time:

“Meaning like, ‘How do I know that if I buy this thing, it’s gonna be around tomorrow? Like what indicia of durability or longevity do I have based on the fact that the history of this asset is 10 years old?’ I think many of these things solve themselves with time.”

In October Fidelity’s personal investing president Kathleen Murphy said that the firm does not offer cryptocurrencies on retail trading platforms to protect its clients from the risky market.

As Bitcoin institutional adoption already started, trading platforms fight to bring Ether to institutions. As Cointelegraph reported in mid-October, Ether futures could be the next mechanism to drive crypto market expansion.

EY Open-Sources Tech It Says Slashes Cost of Private Ethereum Transactions

Accounting multinational EY has released blockchain technology that it claims greatly reduces the cost of private transactions.

In an announcement on Thursday, the firm said the third-generation of its zero-knowledge proof (ZKP) tech for the ethereum blockchain – originally dubbed Nightfall – is now available in the public domain (the documentation can be seen on GitHub).

In the updated code, EY said it’s made additions that allow private transactions at scale by batching up to 20 ZKP transfers in one transaction – a factor it says «significantly» reduces costs. One 20-batch transaction would cost around $0.05, according to the announcement.

ZPKs enable the sharing of information proofs between parties without revealing the information itself and, thus, removing the need for trust. The latest additions to EY’s ZPK tech include batching tools and an enhancement that cuts the size of on-chain Merkle trees – a data structure fundamental to blockchains.

A key factor of the advance, EY said, is that lowering the costs of transactions in this way makes the public ethereum blockchain more competitive with private blockchain networks.

The third-gen code is «the most important EY blockchain milestone in making public blockchains scalable for enterprises,» said Paul Brody, global blockchain leader at EY.

«In the prior iteration released in April 2019, public blockchains were already getting competitive with private networks,» he said. «With this iteration, we cut the cost per transaction by more than 90% again, making private transactions more accessible for mainstream business application.”

However, the new release isn’t restricted to use on the public chain, but can also be deployed on private versions of ethereum.

«On private blockchains, it provides a second layer of security and privacy, supporting more complex privacy models across multiple organizations within industry consortia,» EY said.

Going forward, the company said it has «several» more batching functions that are expected to be added in «coming months.» These will further boost scalability, it said.

“I believe we will look back upon the industrialization of ZKPs as a key milestone in the wide enterprise migration from private to public blockchains,» said Brody.

Just yesterday, EY also made its token and smart contract review service available in public beta. The tool identifies security risks by testing the functionality and efficiency of smart contracts, and further checks that the coding is up to standard.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *