British insurer Legal & General has teamed up with Amazon to establish what it said is the first blockchain system for corporate pension deals.
The insurer said it would use a managed blockchain system launched by Amazon Web Services (AWS) to handle bulk annuities, which involve Legal & General taking over companies’ defined benefit or final salary pension schemes.
Blockchain suits “the long-term nature of annuities business as it allows data and transactions to be signed, recorded and maintained in a permanent and secure nature over the lifetime of these contracts, which can span over 50 years,” Thomas Olunloyo, CEO of Legal & General Reinsurance said.
Blockchain was originally conceived 10 years ago as the basis for the cryptocurrency bitcoin. It is a shared database that can securely process and settle transactions without the need for third-party checks.
Banks and other financial firms have invested millions of dollars in blockchain systems to cut costs and complexity of unwieldy back- and mid-office processes.
But few projects have been deployed at any scale so far, as questions remain over regulation, reliability and cost.
L&G is only launching the blockchain platform for bulk annuity business outside its core markets of Britain and the United States, although an L&G spokesman said the platform could be extended to those two markets in future.
Rahul Pathak, general manager for Amazon Managed Blockchain at AWS, said the deal meant L&G could “focus on building new business … instead of dealing with the challenges of keeping a blockchain network up and running.”
(Reporting by Carolyn Cohn and Tom Wilson; editing by Edmund Blair)
Topics Mergers & Acquisitions Amazon
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
WTW to Acquire Newfront in Deal Worth Up to $1.3B
Tricolor Trustee Files Suit in Texas for Auto Dealer’s Collapse
Death at Universal’s Orlando Resort Roller Coaster Ruled Accidental
Aon Adds to List of Brokers Suing Howden US for Alleged Poaching, Theft 

