Bitspark Switching to Bitshares for Remittances

in #bitcoin7 years ago (edited)

Today we announce that Bitspark will be switching to the Bitshares Blockchain from Bitcoin because it is better suited for the company’s business. That is not to say it is better for everything, but for remittances we see it has some clear advantages. The new payment method will be rolled out slowly for specific currency pairs so that Bitspark’s remittance users will have the access to  all of the worlds 180+ currencies in 12 months. Existing Bitcoin deposits and payment methods will still persist for a time yet while we make the switch. Today we will go into some of the reasoning behind why we are making the switch and why it is our belief that decentralised pegged cryptocurrencies are a major step forward in the remittance world. 

How things work currently for Bitcoin remittances  

It is often lamented on why there are not more blockchain remittance service providers. There have been some companies which have come and gone but generally there are some fundamental realities on how Bitcoin remittances work in 2017. 

Bitcoin is comparatively slow and expensive so everyone prefunds balances at their liquidity providers in bulk. 

With the recent fork, for the last month or so fees have been very low and the mempool has been small resulting in less unforeseen delays, this is great, but the important thing here is predictability. For most of this year the prevailing wisdom for high fees has been “Just pay more fees” which is not reasonable when there is no predictability for it or when your margins per payments on a $200 transaction can be wiped out on a $3 fee. Using dynamic fees also does not  work as a value proposition- when a customer does a remittance trustworthiness is not gained by telling them “one day your fee might be $1 another day it could be $3 and I’m not sure when”. Given this, for many years all Bitcoin remittance companies have prefunded larger amounts with their liquidity providers which lock in rates and eliminates risk of slow payments. You can then draw down upon those balances as new payments arrive. This is a sound model and will remain so but requires upfront capital to prefund in bulk before you receive the remittance money coming in. Ideally, remittance companies do not want to use upfront capital in prefunding balances making it important to find an alternative that truly can send $2 across the world for negligible cost without price volatility risk. 

  Limitations to accessible currencies

Bitcoin remittances make no sense for trading between the major FX pairs (USD, EUR, AUD, GBP etc)- its benefit is for exotic currencies in often developing countries. The reason being spreads on exotic currencies are larger  however  accessing liquidity via traditional methods is difficult with everyone being channeled through a few gatekeepers. Although Bitcoin is traded in many places around the world, only a few emerging market currencies are viable for remittance payments due to the partners in place or the payout methods, fees and connectivity available. 

Liquidity is always a consideration

Although there are many components to cryptocurrency remittances, an important one is liquidity. One needs someone willing to take the other side of a trade in order to transfer money from one location to another via bitcoin (or any other similar crypto) it’s often not a large problem for most cryptocurrency remittance providers as many of the remittance companies have a good list of reliable liquidity providers with capacity far greater than their current need. However, in markets where there may not be liquidity providers (brokers/exchanges/OTC) then bitcoin based remittances are not possible in the local currency and one either needs to settle in another currency or use traditional methods. Opening in an entirely new market with no bitcoin liquidity? Sorry not possible, join the queue at the bank or with Western Union.

 Why Bitshares is Better for Remittances

As things stand currently, Bitshares offers the greatest benefits to a remittance company looking to utilise cryptocurrency as a means to send money quicker, cheaper and to more locations. Bitspark will be aiming for 180+ currencies, instant payments, no cost and zero counterparty risk.

1. Pegged Cryptocurrency Creation

The ability to access the worlds 180+ currencies gets hard past about 30 currencies. Often this requires money transfer providers to open accounts all over the world in different jurisdictions, connect to disparate and often unreliable payment mechanisms which are all intricately different in every country. This leads to it being virtually impossible to connect to everything yourself as a payment provider and instead these providers are forced to connect to the few gatekeepers who do have some semblance of a connection to a payout network. The gatekeepers in these jurisdictions then need to manage their own liquidity and often settle balances between themselves and others in a common currency which is typically USD. This works but it also means there is the additional conversion on their end from the local currency to and from USD which can add a significant cost which is why remittance costs to and from African countries are the highest in the world in that these currencies are often very difficult to access liquidity in and there is usually only one company or bank which has the connection to the local payment mechanism.  

Africa is a good example whereby several countries may share the same currency like CFA, yet a bank in Mali may not be able to send CFA to a bank in Benin even though it is the same currency as they can lack the interbank connections to make it work. So there are also regional differences to take into account with payment providers needing accounts in both locations to settle appropriately.  

The problem to solve is access. Bitshares enables anyone to create a pegged asset and trade it on their decentralised exchange, not only is the asset itself decentralised with no counterparties but also when you trade that asset with others there is no counterparty risk at the exchange level too. This is important for a few reasons:   

  • No counterparties to create the asset means no risk of bank account closure or bank correspondent account closure - the biggest issue in remittances globally at the moment. 
  • No counterparty risk when trading means you do not need to keep money at a centralised exchange or broker which can go down, get hacked, become insolvent or run away with money. 
  • Creating a pegged asset without needing to trust an intermediary who says they have the money backing it and instead, the money and value backing it is in a smart contract on the blockchain transparent to everyone
  • You can create a pegged asset for anything, for every currency or commodity opening up possibilities for new companies and markets.  

The Bitshares Blockchain can solve the problem of access as there is no need to hedge USD and rely on a  single gatekeeper.  Once people can settle between one another in their native currency and with new money transmitter providers they can directly trade/access liquidity in various FX pairs that were virtually non-existent previously.

2. Cheap and Fast

The Bitshares Blockchain itself is built to scale to 100,000 transactions per second with fees as low as fractions of cents and confirmation times sub 3 seconds. Additionally, the Bitshares Blockchain has been fully functioning for 2+ years and has past its testing stage as a viable Blockchain. It is also tangibly more scalable than other public Blockchains currently in terms of throughput.   While this is not a technical paper regarding proof of work, proof of stake and so on, the fact is that as a remittance provider we need to convey a trustless token of value across the world quickly, in a value pegged to a local fiat and with a predictable fee which is something Bitcoin cannot achieve at this moment. As for other altcoins, many are either too immature (no documentation or robust tools/APIs), function the same as Bitcoin (need access to liquidity in local fiats and gateways), do not solve our problems (settlement ledgers have no big benefit as they are still beholden to liquidity pools and gatekeepers) or just plain don't exist yet.  Being able to send individual transactions for a low cost quickly can reduce capital outlays as instead of sending a bulk amount of bitcoin to a liquidity provider and drawing down on the balance, payments can be made as and when they come, freeing up capital for other things.  

3. Liquidity Can Be Less Of An Issue

In the Bitcoin world, a willing participant is needed on the other side of a trade to fill the equivalent fiat value when conducting a cross border transfer. This usually means the need to integrate with one or several liquidity providers or manually manage your payments incoming and outgoing as well as manage your BTC exposure appropriately. At some stage you need people with fiat to offload incoming BTC with, which in many countries can be quite challenging.  The vital connection to local liquidity is through fiat currency, in order to participate as a market maker in various countries you need fiat currency to deposit and exchange with which often means you need to actually be in country to be a market maker as you will need bank accounts denominated in those currencies. However there are not always market makers in every country. For example it is easy to send someone Bitcoin in Myanmar but harder to find more people with Kyat (the local currency) to exchange for BTC, in order to do that the only way to get Kyat into the system is through some centralised entity or gateway and if that doesn’t exist then you’re out of luck.  

With decentralised pegged cryptocurrencies issued on Bitshares, anyone can issue the fiat pegged cryptocurrency so long as they have appropriate BTS to lock up in a smart contract as collateral. This is important as it means anyone around the world can participate as a market maker in various global currencies on the fiat side of the trade without the need to have the local fiat currency on hand via a gateway, it can be entirely automated and done digitally.  This means there is one less hurdle for liquidity in new markets and there is also a natural incentive to create more liquidity- if there is a rising demand for a fiat pegged cryptocurrency then it will be trading higher than its real price so you can make money in creating (locking up BTS collateral) and selling it to the market. While not a silver bullet this improves accessibility to liquidity in any geography or fiat currency in the world.  

4. A Real Decentralised Exchange with Zero Counterparty Risk

As noted, Bitcoin remittance companies and OTC traders rely on a number of intermediaries to ensure they have adequate liquidity to be enter and exit Bitcoin profitably. It doesn't matter how reliable, trustworthy or regulated these intermediaries are, it is still a counterparty risk where  trust is needed in the process. If there is any issue with any of your intermediaries it can affect your business severely. For example a money transfer operator can lose their bank account simply because banks foresee risk in remittances, not due to any breaches a money transfer operator has actually done. This is unacceptable as global micropayments grow and a need for a trustless system to exchange value becomes more in demand, Bitspark believes the Bitshares DEX is one step closer to making that happen. There have been many attempts at decentralised exchanges and many are in operation today like Bitsquare, Openbazaar and other altcoins like Waves  but none are as well suited to remittance companies as the Bitshares DEX.

The Bitshares DEX has been in operation for 2+ years with professional trading and charting information in addition to the light client being connected to your wallet directly for voting on Blockchain proposals and fiat gateway support. It is by far the most developed DEX which lists hundreds of assets and unlike alternatives it is fast as all users are trading other IOUs or decentralised tokens there is no need to wait for settlement, it can be done almost instantly, on the Blockchain.  Of course another big benefit is that exchange mismanagement like MTGox is eliminated as   there is no sole entity in control of your funds- anyone is in complete control of their funds at any given time and they are safeguarded from having to trust various intermediaries.  

Bitshares Still Needs Improvements

One of the key areas is governance. Unlike Proof of Work mining, Bitshares uses a delegated proof of stake model whereby 25 ‘Witnesses’ who are elected produce blocks (and get rewarded in BTS), not miners. This has a few benefits like speed and potential decentralisation but there are some key additions Bitshares could update to improve governance in this area.  Firstly, for a Witness to be active it needs to get voted in, however once in the top 25 there is no easy method to track performance of that Witness. Potentially a Witness could miss blocks and perform poorly and because votes do not decay (and if some accounts are lost or abandoned their votes still count like dead people from the past voting in elections), they will remain in getting paid and doing a bad job. A proposal in the short term could be that votes should decay at some rate forcing users to review a Witnesses performance (perhaps a worker proposal should be to display this performance to everyone within the light wallet) and vote again for the best for and the pool of active Witnesses should be expanded beyond 25.  

Another area shared by newer members of the community is the steep learning curve of the UI, out of date docs on bitshares.org and lack of gateways. These are not issues of the protocol but moreso opportunities for someone to improve via a worker proposal or for a business to setup a new resource hub for information and a new trading interface. Keeping in mind inbuilt voting and decentralised exchanged as part of a trustless network is something that seldom few if any other cryptocurrencies have so there is bound to be areas of improvement.   

Alternatives

In time, more viable alternatives will arise and Bitspark will endeavour to integrate these options aswell into our product offering, but at the moment they are not ready. MakerDAO and Waves are nowhere as developed/documented and cannot do half of the described above, EOS and OpenANX do not exist yet and other alternatives like Tether are centralised with counterparty risk and don't fulfil our requirements. Other settlement layers like Ripple, Stellar or the defunct Falcon Protocol don't actually move value and are no different than using a MySQL database or they are cryptocurrencies which may be better than bitcoin for payments but have no liquidity and address none of the above about creating decentralised fiat pegged cryptocurrencies, great for banks but not for remittance providers. Maybe these alternatives will change over time and address the needs of remittance providers, we absolutely do hope this is the case and are willing to support them when they can address simple remittance use cases: Pegged fiat currency creation, decentralised exchange, fast and cheap Blockchain and inbuilt market making incentives. But until that stage we will be pursuing integration with Bitshares in addition to our existing Bitcoin services  

Bitspark Next Steps

Our focus is on the transition to the Bitshares Blockchain for the rest 2017  and will be fully operating in time for  Bitspark’s most recent project with the United Nations in Tajikistan where Bitspark will be facilitating domestic and international transfers. We believe that the Bitshares Blockchain will eliminate current hurdles with the Bitcoin Blockchain and will be able to apply some of its benefits to the context of Tajikistan whereby previously inaccessiblity to exoitc currencies such as the Tajik Somoni can be revolutionised with Bitshares technology and lead to a cheaper, more secure, faster and trustless system of payment. We look forward to working with local stakeholders and payment providers for the end to end process and believe that great developments will be brought around by this change.   While our first market of Central Asia will be Tajikistan, our aim is to make Bitspark accessible for existing and new partners anywhere in the world. Bitspark’s priority is to enable access to a complete set of currencies with focus on developing countries and we believe giving access to trade into and out of any currency within seconds for no cost will bring great benefit to local people via economic activity and financial inclusion. 

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bitUSD is amazing for moving value around the world quickly, safely and with very little volatility. 3s transactions, send to a named address (instead of a difficult to understand hash of random numbers and letters) and negligible fees.

The most exciting development in Bitshares right now is the HERO token, which is a 5% savings account pegged to the US dollar. Volumes are currently low but it is brand new and working perfectly. The HERO is literally the perfect remittance currency, because it is price stable and pays 5% 'interest' with no lock up period or penalties. Just use it like bitUSD but get a 5% return for just holding it.

I can see services like Bitspark holding their working capital in HERO and using the DEX to move in and out of USD, CNY etc.

Bitshares has been chugging away for 3-4 years and currently does more op/tx than Bitcoin and Ether combined. Zero scaling issues and extremely fast. BTS is easily the most undervalued crypto out there. A boom to $5-10 is not far fetched at all. Exciting times!

bitUSD is market pegged to the US Dollar, so while it is price stable, it still suffers any inflation USD experiences.

HERO token, which is a 5% savings account pegged to the US dollar

This is inaccurate. HERO's price feed is a formula, making it pegged to the value of the USD on December 23rd 1913, with 5% deflation going forward from that day. This means HERO appreciates in value at the rate of 5% annually, not against the value of USD today (which is variable), but against the fixed value of USD the day the Fed was founded.

For anyone who is used to thinking in terms of whatever inflationary fiat currency is chosen by the country they live in), HERO is a completely liquid savings account that earns more than 5% APR. While HERO appreciates at 5%, fiat currencies are also inflating, so the actual return from holding HERO will be something more like rate=5+x where x is the rate of inflation in the fiat currency it's being compared to.

Excellent point, had never thought about 5+x! I really hope HERO goes mainstream, could really change lives

We are watching HERO closely and this is likely a use case for the storage of a portion our customer balances in USD pegged currencies- e.g. HKD, AED, USD etc. +5% ;)

Thoughts on zeph coin price after ico launch?

Depends on if they get listed on Bitfinex, Bittrex or Polo. Any one of those exchanges will pump it 10-100x.

If not on the crooked CEXs growth in token price will come from, you know, an actual business creating real value. Bitspark has been in business for several years and has a solid implementation plan for the remittance business on BTS.

In a couple years they could hit several dollars each...

Wow. Awesome. Good to know.

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Welcome to the party @bitspark, we are super excited to have you!

bitshares is super under valued, how many exchanges need to have problems before bitshares dex begins to dominate as one of the best exchanges.

How many years need to pass before BitShares implements at least top 20 most popular trading pairs that are available on exchanges ?

The lack of several cryptocurrencies (IOU's) could be seen as a business opportunity by someone. After all, the issuer gets the trading fee's.

This is great news and a wise move on your part. Well done :)

@bitspark - great write up and detailed use case here for the application of Bitshares DEX. Assuming all of your technical analysis is accurate, this post is full of nuggets that highlight Bitshares and some of its unique advantages over other technologies. Thanks for the thorough article, and I hope the integration, pegged assets, and migration to using the platform is a huge success!

Thanks we think this will be a very positive and big deal for BTS in general and we will be starting this rollout of Bitshares with our recent deal with the UN here:

http://www.eurasia.undp.org/content/rbec/en/home/blog/2017/7/25/-From-Russia-to-Tajikistan-changing-the-way-money-moves.html

There is a tool for monitoring witness performance, made by @roelandp. https://roelandp.nl/bitshareswitnesslog/

Excellent article that gives exposure to the essentials of Bitshares. Good for you, good for us all! Namaste :)

Your article didn't mention volume. What sums are we talking on an annual basis?

I've seen your posts on Reddit over the years so it's pretty cool to see you here, jumping on board with BitShares and Steem.

Can you say how big you guys are in volume relative to the other Bitcoin Remittance operators such as Coins.ph, BitPesa and Rebit.PH?

Can you indicate the sum for a year? Thank you.