Is Goldman Sachs' Martin Chavez correct in saying that there are no
industrial grade custodial solution for bitcoin? The article also mentioned Xapo, Bitgo and Coinbase to be those solutions, but I reckon it might be more advisable if Goldman Sachs hire developers and build their own private solution.
In any case, if they hire me, I will teach them how to use Electrum hehehe.
Martin Chavez indicates that clients want a Bitcoin derivative, specifically saying “The next stage of the exploration is what we call non-deliverable forwards, these are over the counter derivatives, they’re settled in U.S. dollars and the reference price is the bitcoin-U.S. dollar price established by a set of exchanges”. Goldman Sachs is already settling Bitcoin futures contracts from the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) and Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) since May 2018. This new derivatives product Martin Chavez is talking about is like an in-house version of cash-settled Bitcoin futures.
It would be much better for Bitcoin, and much more groundbreaking, if the product Goldman Sachs plans to launch uses physical Bitcoins. However, Martin Chavez says “Physical bitcoin is something tremendously interesting, and tremendously challenging. From the perspective of custody, we don’t yet see an institutional-grade custodial solution for bitcoin, we’re interested in having that exist and it’s a long road”.Read in full https://bitcoinnews.com/goldman-sachs-not-abandoning-crypto-trading-desk-plans-bitcoin-derivative/Again, they are trying to launch something that is a derivative instead of dealing with actual bitcoins, held on addresses.
All of these derivatives/funds/etc. are all going to be targeting other institutional investors or mainstream traders, instead of actually benefiting anyone that actually uses the bitcoin network for on-chain payments tangibly. They're essentially treating bitcoin as just another speculative asset, which it is in some ways, but they're focusing entirely on that aspect.
People need to understand that. It's why I don't really care about Goldman's decision to put their trading desk idea on hold, because it pretty much brings no benefits to bitcoin itself.
Also, I don't understand why they think that holding funds in Coinbase, Xapo, or Bitgo vaults are secure at all compared to just having a privately developed cold storage wallet. There are just so many counter party risks that could go wrong with vaults that involve a third party. The third party could always access your private keys, and access your funds (whether legally or illegally), regardless of the level of security they've got externally.