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helpme3 | 7 years ago
From my understanding, JPMC wants to issue a new coin and make the market for that coin by buying the coin for $1. Then, they plan to use this coin for it's normal banking tasks, such as lending money, except they would use JPM Coins instead of dollars. By using this coin, they would be able to skirt their fractional reserve requirements. Of course, this coin only has value because of trust in JPMC. If this trust or breached, or if external economic events cause a large amount of JPM Coin to be sold, then this will effectively be a run on JPMC. Given JPMC's size and importance in the marketplace, the aftermath would not be pretty.
nradov|7 years ago
yingw787|7 years ago
chumali|7 years ago
From JPMorgan’s Q&A on JPM Coin [0]:
> The JPM Coin isn’t money per se. It is a digital coin representing United States Dollars held in designated accounts at JPMorgan Chase N.A. In short, a JPM Coin always has a value equivalent to one U.S. dollar. When one client sends money to another over the blockchain, JPM Coins are transferred and instantaneously redeemed for the equivalent amount of U.S. dollars, reducing the typical settlement time.
[0] https://www.jpmorgan.com/global/news/digital-coin-payments
yingw787|7 years ago
Is there any visibility/transparency on how JPM might change the terms of issuance in the future? If not, then the expected value of 1 JPM coin going forward doesn't always match the current face value of 1 JPM coin/1 U.S. dollar, no?
I'm interested to know what percentage in fees/opportunity costs JPM saves when shaving off settlement times by using JPM Coin; if it's the big real reason behind its conception or if there are other plans.
yingw787|7 years ago
...wait you can just do that? Just declare a "thing" to equivalent but not identical by reference to a dollar and go around laws using dollars because you technically aren't using the dollar?
Yeah that's terrifying.
elliekelly|7 years ago
Yes, they're basically taking dollars out of demand deposit accounts and putting them into brokerage accounts. Demand deposit accounts are liquid, guaranteed with FDIC insurance, and the account holder is entitled to the funds at any time. JPM Coin is theoretically liquid and "guaranteed" by JPM in the form of a promise to purchase it for at least $1 (up until they can't of course) but from the article it seems the funds won't be immediately available to account holders:
> Purchases and redemptions may not always be immediate, but once converted to JPMCoin, transfers should be quick and error-free.
The benefit of JPM Coin for JPM is a quicker/cheaper way to facilitate transfers between and among their various legal entities while also reducing the bank entity's total deposits (which in turn reduces the bank's capital and reserve requirements).
The benefit of JPM Coin for JPM customers on the other hand, is not immediately obvious to me.
lucozade|7 years ago
Except they're not doing anything of the sort. They've created a stablecoin backed by their balance sheet. They plan to use it for reducing the friction on payments and payment like processes.
That's it pretty much. TBH if JPM were going to attempt a major violation of their regulatory constraints, I'd expect them not to publish it on their website.
seppin|7 years ago
seppin|7 years ago
pier25|7 years ago
I would not trust JPMC but fiat money (dollars, euros, etc) only has value because of trust in governments.
"Fiat" is latin for "because I said so". I'm only half joking.
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/fiat
TheSoftwareGuy|7 years ago
That's not really true. the value of a currency comes from what you can do with it. E.g. I think $20k is a lot of money because I know it is enough to buy a car. That has nothing to do with the government, only the market.