Welcome back to this new edition of Apac CIO Outlook !!!✖
December 20179 transaction that occurs. Transactions occur in blocks that are link together in an immutable chain using mathematical algorithms. As blockchain helps to make all transactions safe and unique, a unit of physical asset cannot be acquired more than once. Earlier this year, China announced that it will move to block the dollar's global dominance by pricing oil in yuan using a gold-backed futures contract based in Shanghai. The country has also been strengthening its gold reserves in recent years. Breaking a six-year silence in June 2015, China revealed it has 1,658 tons of gold in reserves. The last reported figure before this was 1,054 tons. Chinese regulators have been clamping down on cryptocurrencies and initial coin offerings (ICOs) this year, which begs the question: is China is gearing up for a currency pegged to gold? 2017 also saw the rise of another country that was far more bullish on gold. In June, Kyrgyzstan's Prime Minister Sapar Isakov boldly announced that the nation was keen to create a national cryptocurrency backed by its sovereign stores of gold. Working out reservesLinking a digital asset to a physical amount of gold would help to reinstate the Gold Standard once again. However, the act of such pegging implies a physical store of the asset is needed. Which leads to the question: what is the optimal amount of physical asset you need to store in order to be able to fund such a payment system? To answer that question, Copernicus Gold's mathematicians and economists created a special algorithm. The formula determines the optimal amount of a physical asset a firm needs to hold in its reserves in order to fund a global payment system at any one point in time. The amount calculated is dependent on a wide range of variables, and the mathematical model accounts for the market price of gold, the bullions' weight and other conditions.The algorithm took Copernicus Gold's team more than four years to test and refine. In September 2017, the US Patent Office granted Copernicus Gold a patent for the algorithm -- the first to be granted for a digital asset linked to a commodity reserve. A priority was to consider how to counter the inherent security risks, such as hacking, in blockchain technology. The blockchain had to be structured in such a way that makes it impossible to tamper with transactions, one in which you don't really have to trust the other party or the party in the middle, you can just trust the mathematics.Reaching the unbankedWhile blockchain can help reinstate the Gold Standard, it's unlikely to do so. Fiat currencies are so pervasive in the everyday system of consumerism that governments are unlikely to back away from paper currency any time soon. Still, digital currencies hold great potential to become more mainstream.If you take the unbanked, for example, at least s1 in 4 people globally are unbanked. These are the people that are going to turn to digital assets like Copernicus Gold. Because they can buy slowly online, in any grammage of digital gold, they can save up digital gold until they have enough to redeem physical gold, or trade it for other goods and services -- unencumbered by the need to save in cash, which can be stolen. In that sense, we believe that blockchain will revolutionise money, and in a meaningful way, that will bring back the Gold Standard. Sergei VozchikovFOR A LONG TIME, MONEY WAS BASED ON THE GOLD STANDARD, A SYSTEM BY WHICH THE VALUE OF A COUNTRY'S CURRENCY OR PAPER MONEY WAS DIRECTLY LINKED TO GOLD < Page 8 | Page 10 >