Facebook Libra – Saving gravy.

source: The Economist

Vested interests sink Libra.

  • There are certainly regulatory issues that need to be addressed with Facebook’s or any digital currency, but I suspect that the main reason for Libra’s failure is the protection of vested interests.
  • The banking system as it exists to today is not fit for purpose.
  • Despite massive consumer digitisation, it is still slow, overly bureaucratic, expensive and cumbersome to send money through the global banking system.
  • Transactions which should already be frictionless and instantaneous are often taxed by multiple handlers and take days to complete.
  • This is an industry that is more ripe for disruption than any other and yet all attempts to force it to modernise have failed.
  • Facebook’s Libra project is the latest attempt to fail and while there are certainly issues that need to be addressed, I think that this one had real potential to offer consumers a decent digital currency (see here)
  • The original list that signed up was impressive, particularly as Mastercard, Stripe, Visa, eBay and PayPal would have been instrumental in driving the adoption of the digital currency by consumers.
  • Given the right protections for consumers, I think that Libra could have been extremely successful but clearly, the banks and payment companies saw this as an existential threat to the gravy train.
  • This, I suspect, was the main reason why there was so much horror and dismay from politicians and regulators when Libra launched in June.
  • Following what must have been serious heat from banks and politicians, all of the really key players have pulled their backing from Libra, leaving it floundering.
  • Facebook is putting a brave face on it with David Marcus urging caution when predicting the fate of Libra, but it is clear to me that its fate is sealed.
  • This is because there is no way that Facebook will be able to do this on its own.
  • Facebook’s reputation with regulators has been dreadful ever since the Cambridge Analytica incident meaning that no one really thinks that users should hand over their banking activities to Facebook.
  • Tencent and Alibaba have managed to do it in China but as always, the situation there is very different.
  • Credit card penetration was not that high meaning that there were only untraceable cash-based transactions to disrupt.
  • Hence from a regulatory perspective, both AliPay and WeChat Pay were a big improvement and hence had the tacit approval of the Chinese Government.
  • In developed markets, card payment and banking penetration is high meaning that a very low-cost monetary transfer system from a company where almost everyone is already a user would be a financial catastrophe for a large segment of the economy.
  • The problem as I see it is that politicians do not want a large segment of the economy put out of work and the sector itself will always fight to preserve its gravy train for as long as it can.
  • The Chinese example shows that if there was a will among the powers that be to make a digital currency work in developed markets, it could be done without any real difficulty.
  • Hence, Libra looks set to enter the well-populated graveyard of those that have attempted to disrupt the banking industry and failed.
  • For as long as the banking industry fails to improve its service and cost to consumers, there will be no shortage of attempts to disrupt it.
  • The best thing banking can do is either make the existing service so good that there is little incentive to create an alternative or create the alternative itself.
  • I have little hope for either and while the industry remains protected, very little is likely to change.

RICHARD WINDSOR

Richard is founder, owner of research company, Radio Free Mobile. He has 16 years of experience working in sell side equity research. During his 11 year tenure at Nomura Securities, he focused on the equity coverage of the Global Technology sector.