Tokenisation is the greatest disruptor ahead

Blockchain technology will open up illiquid assets, like real estate, to new investors in what could be the greatest disruption ahead. Franklin Templeton’s Jenny Johnson explains how the asset manager is ensuring it taps the new opportunity.

Prepare for a new tokenised economy where assets are fractionalised, divided up amongst potentially millions of investors into tiny portions of ownership on a blockchain. It will enhance liquidity, price discovery and accessibility to high value, illiquid assets like real estate at a fraction of current transaction costs. For example, it could lead to multiple owners of a single piece of prime real estate via tokens and programmed smart contracts that allow every single investor to safely collect their one-millionth of the rent.

Speaking at FIS Digital Jenny Johnson president of Franklin Templeton explained that it was this belief in a blockchain-led disruption ahead that is driving the firm’s keen focus on how distributed ledger technology will impact asset management and private markets in the future.

Blockchain is already well known for transforming companies’ back-office data reconciliation. Now investors should prepare for further change ahead.

“Real estate is an obvious one. It makes me excited about the opportunities in the industry,” she said.

Franklin Templeton’s investment in the tokenisation space includes incubator investment in a tech-enabled farmland platform that fractionalises ownership, helping farmers sell off portions of their business. Elsewhere, the firm is working on an AI project to value art.

Sponsored Content

“We are trying to understand the space,” she said. “It is quickly evolving and there are lots of dead ends, but if we are not focused, we will miss out.”

Johnson voiced her determination to bring creativity, innovation and the entrepreneurial spirit to Franklin Templeton as the 4th industrial revolution gathers steam. She warned investors that incumbents rarely fair well during periods of innovation since they have to focus on doing their day-to-day job alongside keeping up with the future. Her strategy is to cultivate small groups of expert teams, carved out of existing teams where their focus on innovation was often seen as distracting.

Johnson urged delegates not to confuse Ethereum, the decentralized blockchain network powered by Ether coins, with Bitcoin which she called “niche”.

She said the programming language on the blockchain will lead to proliferation of other applications in financial services and gaming.

Acquisition

Franklin Templeton recently announced its purchase of private equity investment specialist Lexington Partners for $1.75 billion building its presence in private equity secondary funds and co-investments. The announcement follows on from other recent acquisitions of private credit manager Benefit Street Partners, real estate investor Clarion Partners and hedge fund K2 Advisors. Franklin Templeton’s highest-profile acquisition came in February 2020 when it bought rival Legg Mason for $6.5 billion

Johnson told delegates that the acquisitions fill product gaps at the firm and enable Franklin Templeton to provide asset owners with solutions, not just products.

“We want to partner with thought leadership,” she said.

It’s led the firm to establish an Academy to help train and educate partners and an Institute that draws on expertise across the business. In-house experts offer insights on how investors should position for the evolution of the vaccines, to expertise on water risk. She said that acquisitions have also been shaped to fill specific niche capabilities at the firm. For example, it now aims to offer Separately Managed Accounts to institutional and retail clients that overlay quant data analysis.

Johnson, renown for her championing of diversity, pleaded with asset owners to view diversity in their employees as importantly as they do in the portfolios.

“We don’t put together portfolios that aren’t diverse,” she said. “Different views to solve a problem produce better outcomes.”

Asset owners with long term investment horizons, coupled with legislation, will increasingly hold asset managers accountable. Asset owners are demanding more of their managers and asset managers should be driven by what their clients are looking for, said Johnson, the fourth member of the family over three generations to lead the fund manager since it was founded by her grandfather in 1947.

“My father always used to say, take care of the client and the business will takes care of itself.”

Leave a Comment

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

Portfolios built for the old world will be severely tested as emerging forces rewrite the rules of investing. The Fiduciary Investors Symposium heard that geopolitical and macroeconomic upheaval, together with the disruption wrought by AI, should force asset owners to rethink the structure and composition of portfolios.

Sort content by

Understanding US/China relations

Understanding the fractious relationship between US and China is more important– and simultaneously more confronting – than it has been in the past, according to Stephen Kotkin, professor of history and international affairs at Princeton University. While the China investment challenge has always been to capture the aspirational middleclass, the high-profile historian says “the big money that’s going to be made in China is going to be made from the dislocation”.

Investors should backoff policy: Kay

Pension funds have “no business” engaging with policy makers but instead should influence change through stewardship, which is also the main function of asset managers, according to John Kay, Supernumerary Fellow in Economics at St Johns College, Oxford University.

UniSuper looks to China

The A$70 billion Australian superannuation fund for higher education and research workers, UniSuper, is keen on China. CIO John Pearce explains why.

Relationship built on knowledge transfer

A knowledge exchange between the State of Wisconsin Investment Board and its manager, Parametric, has seen the fund become comfortable understanding the instruments involved to manage a chunk of its total levered allocation in-house.

Urgent policy action needed on climate

Last month Ceres convened the largest group of businesses calling for climate legislation in at least a decade. Their message was loud and clear: Congress must put forward policy responses equal to the severity of the climate crisis including a national price on carbon.

HESTA maps investments against SDGs

The A$50 billion superannuation fund for health care professionals, HESTA, has embarked on a journey of aligning its assets with the SDGs. Measuring its current investments against chosen sustainable development goals revealed a need for standardised measurement tools.

Previous