SINGAPORE – PwC’s latest survey had 82% of executives surveyed in Singapore (versus 84% globally) report that blockchain initiatives are underway in their organisations; with 13% fully live (versus 15% globally). The new research study “Blockchain is here. What’s your next move?” surveyed 600 executives in 15 countries and territories, on their development of blockchain and views on its potential.
As blockchain rewires business and commerce, the research provides a clear signal of organisations’ fear of being left behind as blockchain developments accelerate globally, opening up opportunities including reduced cost, greater speed and more transparency and traceability.
A quarter of executives report a blockchain implementation pilot in progress (10% globally, 13% in Singapore) or fully live (15% globally, 13% in Singapore). Globally, almost a third (32%) reported blockchain projects in development, while nearly a quarter (23%) share the same response in Singapore. In addition, a fifth of respondents globally (20%) and in Singapore (23%) say that they are in research mode.
The US (29%), China (18%), Australia (7%) are perceived as the most advanced currently in developing blockchain projects. However within three to five years, respondents believe China will have overtaken the US (30%), shifting the early centre of influence and activity from the US and Europe.
The survey reflects the early dominance of financial services developments in blockchain with 46% globally identifying it as the leading sector currently and 41% in near term (3-5 years). Sectors identified by respondents with emerging potential within 3-5 years include energy and utilities (14%), healthcare (14%) and industrial manufacturing (12%).
Said Greg Unsworth, Digital Business Leader, PwC Singapore: “What business executives tell us is that no-one wants to be left behind by Blockchain developments and there is an intense interest on what this can mean for their businesses.”
“A well-designed blockchain doesn’t just cut out intermediaries, it can reduce costs, increase speed, reach, transparency and traceability for many business processes. The business case can be compelling, if organisations understand what their end game is in using the technology, and match that to their design.”
Blockchain’s biggest benefits will be developed and delivered through shared industry wide platforms. But the study notes that this won’t happen without industry specific companies – including competitors – agreeing on common standards and operating together.
Despite the technology’s potential, respondents identified lack of trust among potential users as one of the biggest blockers to blockchain’s adoption. This is especially so in Singapore at 57% (vs 45% globally) of respondents identifying it as a top three blocker to blockchain adoption.
Zooming in further, lack of trust among potential users was found to be the highest in Singapore with 37% of respondents ranking it as the top concern (compared to 25% globally), followed by the UAE (34%) and Hong Kong (35%). This reflects in part the dominance of financial services in blockchain development globally and Singapore’s position as a trusted financial services hub.
Also identified as another potential barrier to blockchain adoption is regulatory uncertainty according to 48% of global respondents and half (50%) of the respondents in Singapore.
“Blockchain by its very definition should engender trust. But in reality, companies confront trust issues at nearly every turn. Failing to state a clear business case from the outset leads to projects stalling. Businesses need to put more effort into building into their design how they can tackle trust and regulatory concerns,” added Unsworth.
“Creating and implementing blockchain to realise its potential is not an IT project. It’s a transformation of business models, roles, and processes. It needs a clear business case, an ecosystem to support it; with rules, standards and flexibility to deal with regulatory change built in.”
Globally, one in three of those respondents who reported little or no involvement with blockchain cited the reason for a lack of progress as cost (31%), uncertainty over where to start (24%) and governance issues (14%).
The study identifies four key areas for focus in the development of internal or industry wide blockchain platforms:
- Make the business case: organisations can start small, but need to set out clearly the purpose of the initiative so other participants can identify and align around it.
- Design deliberately around what users can see and do: Partners need rules and standards for access permissions. Involving risk professionals including legal, compliance, cybersecurity – from the start will ensure blockchain frameworks that regulators and users can trust.
- Build an ecosystem: Participants should come together from different companies in an industry to work on a common set of rules to govern blockchains. Of the 15% of survey respondents who already have live applications, 88% were either leaders or active members of a blockchain consortium.
- Navigate regulatory uncertainty: The study warns that blockchain developers should watch but not wait as regulatory requirements will evolve over the coming years. It’s vital to engage with regulators to help shape how the environment evolves.
Download the study here: pwc.com/blockchainsurvey
Notes:
- The study examines the views of 600 executives in 15 countries: Australia, China, Denmark, France, Germany, HK, India, Italy, Japan, Netherlands, Singapore, Sweden, UAE, UK, US.
- 14% had no activity in place and 7% have paused their development.
- Of the 15% who already have live applications, 88% were leaders, or active members of consortia who were responsible for the blockchain infrastructure supporting their application. Companies that take a leadership role in a consortium have principal funding and control considerations, including IP ownership.
- Membership / Participation: Respondents also reported on the management of their use cases. Of those use cases, 40% have restricted access to participate (permissioned), and all participants are pre-qualified: 34% allow anyone to participate (permissionless): 26% take a hybrid approach (some data is private; some is open to everyone). Considering access to the blockchain, 40% are private; 28% hybrid and 32% have public access to read transactions on the blockchain.