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Autore: | Friesendorf Cordelia |
Titolo: | Decentralized Finance (DeFi) : How Decentralized Applications (dApps) Disrupt Banking / / by Cordelia Friesendorf, Alena Blütener |
Pubblicazione: | Cham : , : Springer Nature Switzerland : , : Imprint : Springer, , 2023 |
Edizione: | 1st ed. 2023. |
Descrizione fisica: | 1 online resource (116 pages) |
Disciplina: | 332.0285574 |
Soggetto topico: | Financial engineering |
Financial services industry | |
Business information services | |
Capital market | |
Technological innovations | |
Financial Technology and Innovation | |
Financial Services | |
IT in Business | |
Capital Markets | |
Innovation and Technology Management | |
Altri autori: | BlütenerAlena |
Nota di contenuto: | Intro -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Decentralized Finance: How dApps Disrupt Banking -- 1.1 Loss of Trust in Banking -- 1.1.1 Rethink and Innovation -- 1.1.2 Democratization of Global Banking -- 1.1.3 Motivation and Plan of the Book -- References -- Chapter 2: Centralized Finance -- 2.1 The Evolution of Banking in Europe -- 2.2 Trust as a Store of Value -- 2.3 The Institutionalization of Trust -- 2.4 Banking License Types -- 2.4.1 E-Money Licenses -- 2.4.2 Fintech License -- 2.4.3 Extended License -- 2.4.4 Traditional License -- 2.5 Banking License Criteria -- 2.5.1 Initial Capital -- 2.5.2 Business Plan -- 2.5.3 Requirements for Managing Directors -- 2.5.4 Requirements for the Holders of Qualifying Holdings -- 2.6 Bank Categories, Business Models, and Products -- 2.6.1 Global Banking -- 2.6.2 Private Banking/Wealth Management -- 2.6.3 Investment Banking -- 2.6.4 Retail/Consumer Banking -- 2.6.5 Corporate Banking -- 2.6.6 Bulge Brackets -- 2.6.7 Middle Market -- 2.6.8 Elite Boutique -- 2.6.9 Regional or Industry Boutiques -- 2.7 Banking Competition in Retail Markets -- References -- Chapter 3: Decentralized Finance: Concept and Characteristics -- 3.1 Features of Decentralized Finance -- 3.1.1 Decentralized Applications (dApps) -- 3.1.2 Total Value Locked -- 3.1.2.1 Centralized -- 3.1.2.2 Semi-Decentralized -- 3.1.2.3 Fully Decentralized -- 3.1.3 Accessibility and Market Expansion -- 3.1.4 Remittance Convenience -- 3.1.5 Security via Transparency -- References -- Chapter 4: Decentralized Finance: Technical Basis -- 4.1 Blockchain as Centrifugal Technology -- 4.1.1 Distributed Ledger Technology -- 4.1.2 Non-fungible Tokes -- 4.2 Ethereum's Robust Complementarity -- 4.2.1 Solidity and Ether -- 4.2.2 Gas Fee Pricing Model -- 4.2.3 Decentralized Autonomous Organization -- 4.3 Smart Contract Efficiency -- References. |
Chapter 5: Decentralized Finance: Categories -- 5.1 Decentralized Stablecoins -- 5.2 Decentralized Derivatives -- 5.2.1 Future -- 5.2.2 Forwards -- 5.2.3 Options -- 5.2.4 Swaps -- 5.3 Decentralized Payments -- 5.4 Decentralized Lending and Borrowing -- 5.5 Decentralized Exchange -- 5.6 Decentralized Wealth Management -- 5.7 Decentralized Lotteries -- 5.8 Decentralized Insurance -- References -- Chapter 6: Decentralized Finance: Safety and Security -- 6.1 Financial Risks -- 6.2 Technology Risks -- 6.3 Procedural Risks -- 6.4 Regulatory Risks -- References -- Chapter 7: Decentralized Finance: Regulation -- 7.1 Financial Action Task Force (FATF) -- 7.2 Markets in Crypto Assets -- 7.3 Environment, Social, and Governance (ESG) -- 7.4 Regulatory Transformation -- References -- Chapter 8: Comparison of Centralized and Decentralized Finance -- 8.1 Criterion-Based Tabular Comparison -- 8.2 Scope of Differences -- References -- Chapter 9: Decentralized Finance: Use-Cases -- 9.1 Decentralized Stablecoins -- 9.1.1 Custodial Stablecoins -- 9.1.2 Asset-Backed Stablecoins -- 9.1.3 Algorithmic Stablecoins -- 9.2 Decentralized Exchanges -- 9.3 Decentralized Credit -- 9.4 Decentralized Derivatives -- 9.5 Decentralized Insurance -- 9.6 Decentralized Asset Management -- References -- Chapter 10: Decentralized Finance: Empirical Analysis of Customer Willingness -- 10.1 Appraisal of the Qualitative Approach -- 10.2 Hypothesis-Building and Validation -- 10.3 Survey Questions and Results -- 10.3.1 Customer Age Demographics -- 10.3.2 Generational Satisfaction with Their Bank -- 10.3.3 Bank Recommendation Tendency -- 10.3.4 Reasons for Not Recommending Their Bank -- 10.3.5 Environment, Social, and Governance (ESG) Impact -- 10.3.6 The Value of Sustainability as Progressive or Futuristic -- 10.3.7 Customer as Investor -- 10.3.8 Investment Preferences and Behaviors. | |
10.3.9 Zero-Switching Costs Scenario -- 10.3.10 Green Pressure on Banks in Germany -- 10.3.11 Inclination to Cryptocurrency Investments -- 10.3.12 Place of Bitcoin -- References -- Chapter 11: Discussion and Conclusion -- 11.1 Learnings and Implications -- 11.1.1 Transparency Builds Trust -- 11.1.2 Closing the Banking vs. Unbanked People Gap -- 11.1.3 ESG: Toward a Greener and Fairer World -- 11.1.4 Enhancing Digital Trust -- 11.1.5 DeFi Creates Low-Cost Entry -- 11.1.6 Need for Advanced DLT Solutions -- 11.1.7 Increasing Financial Inclusiveness -- 11.1.8 Growth-Supportive Regulation -- 11.1.9 Interoperability and Standardization -- 11.1.10 Increased Accountability in Decision-Making -- 11.1.11 Diversity of Ideas and Creativity -- 11.1.12 Elimination of the Middleman -- 11.1.13 Market Transition -- 11.1.14 Ownership and Control -- 11.1.15 Auditability -- 11.2 Strategic Agility: Incumbent Positioning of Banks -- 11.2.1 Operational Versus Strategic Agility -- 11.2.2 Internal Change Management -- 11.2.3 Digital Portfolio in Wealth Products -- 11.2.4 Digital Identity Products as an Opportunity -- 11.3 Recent Developments and Future Outlook -- 11.4 Conclusion -- References. | |
Sommario/riassunto: | This book explores how decentralized finance (DeFi) can disrupt traditional centralized finance including the business areas of insurance companies, banks, money markets, and bonds. DeFi is not a company or a single product, rather it is a collection of products or services. As part of the Ethereum ecosystem, DeFi services are provided as Decentralized Applications (dApps), which require smart contracts to lock in assets for processing transactions. Changing consumer expectations, the availability of affordable technologies, and entrepreneurial drive create space for DeFi. Geopolitical crises and trust deterioration exacerbate the need. This book explains the concept of DeFi, the technological opportunities, the current reality and status quo of business transactions, and demonstrates the potential for future use and the eventual transformation of the financial industry. It further provides a comprehensive analysis of the real-world applications of DeFi, the Decentralized Ledger Technology (DLT), and digital assets, as well as their potential risks to consumers and financial institutions to bankers, managers, investors, and policymakers. |
Titolo autorizzato: | Decentralized Finance (DeFi) |
ISBN: | 3-031-37488-6 |
Formato: | Materiale a stampa |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione: | Inglese |
Record Nr.: | 9910742485503321 |
Lo trovi qui: | Univ. Federico II |
Opac: | Controlla la disponibilità qui |