At the Money 20/20 conference in Las Vegas, Nasdaq revealed its new trading platform Linq with its first demonstration. The institution revealed earlier this year they would trial blockchain technology to see how it handled share trading. Nasdaq Group CEO Robert Greifeld told the conference the first participants will include Chain, Vera, Tango, ChangeTip and more.
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“We are extremely encouraged by the initial demand for Nasdaq Linq from these innovative, first-mover companies, and the validation it represents of our application of blockchain technology. — Blockchain applied to the private market is innovation built on top of innovation, and carries with it the opportunity to forever alter the future of financial services infrastructure.” — Bob Greifeld, CEO, Nasdaq
There’s been quite a bit of debate about whether or not private assets should be traded via the Bitcoin blockchain. Some like the idea of permissioned blockchains operating on their own accord or acting like a sidechain with Bitcoin. Then there are those that feel that issuing assets besides BTC over the network will just bloat the blockchain. Companies like SETL.io, MultiChain, Openchain, Mijin and more make it seem like there is a lot of permissioned blockchain ideas out there, and people want to get behind this technology fast.
“Chain is thrilled to be powering Nasdaq Linq and to be an inaugural client of this innovative new platform. We are excited to leverage Nasdaq Linq to issue and manage our company’s securities in a more efficient and transparent way.” — Adam Ludwin, CEO of Chain.com
Nasdaq has been facilitating trade solutions since 1971, and the American/Canadian market is the second largest stock exchange in the world. The company has always had a keen eye on technology by being the first electronic trade market offering quotes initially. Then Nasdaq grabbed the Over-the-Counter (OTC) the lions share of global stock trades in 1987, and the exchange at the time was commonly referred to as OTC. The exchange had shown interests in blockchain technology early on before many other financial institutions caught on to its use cases. The group announced that it was testing out the Open Assets platform created by Coinprism and just recently collaborated a partnership with Secondmarket Solutions.
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