Faster Settlement May Make For Poorer Markets

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Opinion by: Chris Kim, CEO and co-founder at Axis.

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The global financial landscape is undergoing a tectonic shift toward instantaneous transaction finality. The United States’ move to T+1 settlement for equities in 2024 was a watershed moment, with Europe, the United Kingdom, and key Asian markets now targeting a similar transition by 2027. This relentless push toward real-time processing is not merely a technical upgrade; it is a fundamental re-engineering of market plumbing. Yet, as blockchain-based systems promise atomic settlement—where asset and payment transfer occur simultaneously—a critical and often overlooked paradox emerges: the very speed that eliminates counterparty risk imposes severe new constraints on capital and liquidity.

The Capital Efficiency Conundrum of Instant Settlement

To understand the stakes, one must first appreciate the capital magic of delayed settlement. In a T+2 or T+1 framework, trading is continuous, but the physical exchange of cash and securities is batched and managed by central clearinghouses. This delay is not inefficiency; it is a deliberate design feature. It allows institutions to net their positions. A market maker executing hundreds of trades in a single stock only needs to settle the net difference at day’s end, not every individual buy and sell. This netting effect means a limited pool of capital—say, $1 million—can efficiently support a trading volume many times its size throughout the day, as funds circulate and are reused before final settlement.

Why Atomic Settlement Ties Up Capital

Atomic settlement, often synonymous with T+0 on blockchain networks, dismantles this cycle. Each trade must be fully funded and settled in a single, indivisible moment. The $1 million can now only back $1 million in gross trade value at any given instant. The opportunity to net exposures across multiple trades vanishes. Capital becomes gridlocked, locked into each transaction until the ledger updates. While operationally faster, the system becomes financially less efficient. This is the core of the atomic settlement paradox: the pursuit of frictionless, risk-free trade execution directly increases the quantum of capital required to support the same level of market activity.

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Quantifying the Pressure: From Theory to Market Reality

This is not a hypothetical exercise. The recent transition from T+2 to T+1 in the U.S. provides a real-world case study. Data from the National Securities Clearing Corporation (NSCC) revealed that the required Clearing Fund—the pool of capital members post to cover potential losses—dropped by approximately $3.0 billion, or 23%, from its T+2 average. This reduction reflects the decreased need for collateral over a shorter settlement window. However, the change also compressed the time firms have to manage intraday liquidity and collateral movements from two business days into one. The operational tempo accelerated dramatically.

Scaling this dynamic to atomic

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