Market Structure
The market-structure case for Ollo starts with scale and structural friction in FX, not with tokenization for its own sake.
Core Thesis
Ollo's research starts from three linked observations:
- FX is one of the world's largest markets, but access and settlement still remain relationship-heavy and operationally fragmented.
- Stablecoins create a new settlement substrate while also introducing basis risk across issuers and rails.
- Onchain infrastructure can improve execution legibility, settlement coordination, and risk transfer before it replaces every legacy market layer.
FX Scale
Current Ollo research cites roughly $9.6 trillion in daily OTC FX turnover. Even at that scale, access remains relationship-heavy and operationally fragmented.
Where Friction Comes From
Key frictions include:
- Bilateral credit gating
- Prefunded capital
- Opaque execution practices
- Fragmented post-trade settlement
Published source material makes the prefunding problem concrete. SWIFT reported that 34% of the cost of an international payment is related to Nostro trapped liquidity, while Circle's StableFX Litepaper cites estimates that roughly $27 trillion sits idle in nostro/vostro accounts globally to support prefunding of FX transactions. For a worked-through version of how those costs can flow into spreads and financing terms, see Concepts: Why Onchain FX.
Stablecoins Change The Context
Stablecoins provide a new settlement substrate, but they also create issuer-by-issuer basis risk. That makes stablecoin fragmentation part of the FX problem, not a separate topic.
Which Layers Onchain Can Improve First
The strongest case in current Ollo research is for improving:
- Settlement coordination
- Execution legibility
- Risk transfer
It is less realistic to assume that protocol design alone will immediately replace credit relationships, licenses, or every distribution layer in legacy FX.