11) The moral of the story is: payments are hard.
There are many reasons for this, but they all circle around the same core problem:
What, exactly, does it mean to send someone money? What does it mean for that money to "settle"?
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14) Just to demonstrate this:
I initialized Bob with $99.75 and some SOL (from FTX) (solscan.io/account/CHEr3k).
I then created a second brand new wallet, solscan.io/account/JAEcyo ('Alice')
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15) So then I went to send $50 from Bob to Alice.
I clicked 'send' at 8:19:33 am.
By 8:19:45, when I tabbed over to Alice, the $50 had already landed.
The fee I paid was $0.0002: around 2% of a penny.
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21) And then, two days later (!!!), comes settlement time.
The share of AAPL is settled through the DTCC via something like:
NASDAQ --> PFOF#2's clearing firm --> ATS --> PFOF#1's clearing firm --> broker's clearing firm, with the DTCC in between every transfer.
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22) Meanwhile, the dollars used to purchase the stock flow through banks.
So in order for your friend to buy one share of AAPL, 11 different entities have to settle with each other over the next few days in 10 payments.
And in theory, _any one of those settlements could fail_.
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24) And eventually that risk got too big for the brokers, which had to partially shut down.
How does crypto help this?
Well, first of all, with a full stack product, settlement is way simpler.
Here's what it takes to buy and settle on ftx.com/trade/BTC/USD:
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27) So blockchain can create simpler, more equitable, and less risky market structure and settlement.
It can help us avoid problems like Gamestop day. And, for that matter, LME Nickel: ftxpolicy.com/posts/risk-man.
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