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Andrew Crawford
Digital Assets thought leader and innovator.
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July 17, 2018
With Westpac pulling out of property lending for SMSF's. The door is closing on one of the inducements used by promoters to shoehorn people into an SMSF by enabling them to use their super to purchase property. Around 20% of SMSFs were set up over the past few years to access property investments (even yes, illiquid private REITs). With the withdrawal of liquidity and a slowing return outlook for investment property. Many would-be trustees may well be forced to make the smart move to remain in their superannuation fund. For most working Australians with an income under $180,000, an SMSF never made sense when you consider the additional costs and effort involved for sub-optimal return outcomes (they have consistently underperformed most industry super funds). For the most part SMSFs were sold, not bought. Removing the lure of leveraging into property should lead to better outcomes for would-be Trustees. A good call by Westpac. Industry Super Australia #superannuation OnTrack Retirement  Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia (ASFA) #cnbc #pulse https://lnkd.in/f2DEDxt
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July 17, 2018
Blockchain based technologies and wallet-based systems are causing a paradigm shift in asset management because they redefine how assets are created, managed, and transferred—ushering in a new era of transparency, efficiency, and accessibility. Digital Money, ie stablecoins and tokenized deposits integrated into digital wallets, will establish the beachhead. Key settlement, liquidity, collateral, trade finance, insurance, distribution, cross-border payment, and identity infrastructure will then be integrated or developed around this new mechanism to transfer value peer-to-peer. Then the assets held in traditional custodial structures, like funds, will migrate rapidly and digital assets will enter their growth phase. There are 6 key elements that will drive driving, namely: 1. Disintermediation Traditional asset management relies on layers of intermediaries (custodians, transfer agents, administrators) and multiple ledgers. Blockchain replaces these with a single decentralized ledgers, wallets and smart contracts, reducing costs and friction 2. Transparency Every transaction is delivered simultaneously to all stakeholder, recorded immutably and can be audited in real time. This builds trust among investors and regulators, especially in complex fund structures. 3. Automation Fund operations like NAV calculation, investor onboarding, and compliance checks can be automated. This reduces human error and accelerates settlement cycles. 4. Liquidity and Accessibility Tokenized assets can be traded 24/7 on global platforms, improving liquidity for traditionally illiquid investments - no more ‘9-to-5’. Fractional ownership and wallet-based infrastructure opens access to retail and underserved markets. 5. Security and Resilience Advanced encryption and decentralized architecture reduce single points of failure. Enable investors to retain self sovereignty of their data. Establish trust without disclosing your personal details. Blockchain mitigates risks of fraud and cyberattacks through tamper-proof records. 6. Interoperability Blockchain enables cross-border asset flows without relying on siloed infrastructure. Wallets composable financial products that can interact across jurisdictions and platforms In the near future, assets will be increasingly recorded on blockchain technologies. The trajectory is clear. Making the most of this paradigm shift, like when share trading went from voice to electronic, will create new market leaders who position themselves strategically today.
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August 15, 2025