Client-owned wealth data layer
A user-controlled wealth data layer would let households keep portfolio history, planning assumptions, tax lots, advisor notes, and risk preferences in portable stores that multiple advisors, analytics tools, and custodians can read with permission.
Thesis
Bitcoin / decentralization role
Coordination mechanism
Verification / trust model
Failure modes
- • Standards adoption may stall if major custodians and advisors refuse portable data models.
- • Privacy and liability risks rise if users mismanage credentials or grant overly broad access.
- • Open analytics cannot replace fiduciary judgment, suitability review, or regulated supervision by itself.
Adoption path
- • Start with read-only aggregation and self-hosted planning tools for clients who already export brokerage and tax data.
- • Add advisor-facing workflows that preserve portable notes, risk questionnaires, and investment-policy statements across firms.
- • Integrate licensed custodians and compliance vendors once audit logs and permission standards become reliable enough for supervised use.
Decentralization fit
7.0/10
Coordination credibility
6.0/10
Implementation feasibility
6.0/10
Incumbent pressure