Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20260425)

How Agentic AI Will Reshape Payments (IMF)

An IMF paper by Sonja Davidovic and Hervé Tourpe argues that agentic artificial intelligence (AI) is poised to fundamentally alter payment system architecture by shifting transaction initiation from human instructions to machine decisions. The note applies a three-layer framework of intent, authorization, and settlement to identify where agentic AI can add efficiency while preserving control and transaction finality. The paper finds that the core tension between AI’s probabilistic decision-making and the deterministic requirements of payment infrastructure raises unresolved questions about authorization integrity, compliance traceability, and systemic risk concentration. Governance and institutional design — rather than technology alone — are identified as the primary determinants of whether outcomes are stabilizing or destabilizing. The principal open question is how existing legal and regulatory frameworks, which presuppose human-initiated transactions, can be adapted to assign accountability when autonomous agents are the transacting parties. [IMF]

I think that this paper is significant because it is the first one of its kind, focusing outwardly to risks posed by wide-scale agentic AI usage, that I’ve come across, from an official institution. However, there are a few that come close, albeit not from official institutions:

AI Agents in Action: Foundations for Evaluation and Governance (WEF)

In November 2025 the World Economic Forum (WEF), set out a framework for deploying large language model-based AI agents in organizations, emphasizing structured evaluation and progressive governance. The paper argues that agent architectures now combine application, orchestration and reasoning layers, connected via interoperability protocols that enable powerful multi-agent workflows but expand the cyber attack surface. It proposes classifying agents by function, role, predictability, autonomy, authority and operational context to link technical design choices to risk assessment and safeguards, supporting proportionate controls and clearer allocation of responsibility between providers and adopters. [WEF]

Model AI Governance Framework for Agentic AI (IMDA)

Singapore’s Infocomm Media Development Authority (IMDA) published a model governance framework for agentic AI that prescribes how organizations should bound risks, assign accountability, and embed controls across the lifecycle of autonomous language‑model‑based agents. It defines agents as multi‑step planners with tools, memory, and protocols, emphasizes risk from real‑world action, sensitive data access, and complex multi‑agent dynamics, and analyzes new system‑level failure modes. The framework then articulates four pillars—upfront risk/use‑case assessment, human accountability and oversight, lifecycle technical and security controls, and end‑user responsibility through transparency and training—as a reference architecture for enterprise deployment and prospective regulation. It positions these as adaptable building blocks rather than fixed rules, and flags open questions around agent identity, dynamic authorization, evaluation methods, and cross‑border accountability, inviting feedback and case studies to refine future iterations. [IMDA]

Systemic Risks Associated with Agentic AI (ACM)

The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) published a policy brief arguing that current European Union (EU) AI Act provisions only partially address systemic risks from highly autonomous agentic AI systems. It describes agents capable of self-directed, tool-using operation and multi-agent coordination, stressing risks of loss of human control, opacity, economic disruption, and malicious uses in cyberattacks, disinformation, and market manipulation. The brief proposes shifting from static, product-focused rules to dynamic governance with lifecycle monitoring, multi-agent testing, strengthened cybersecurity, and potential new categories for macroeconomic and systemic risks. It highlights unresolved questions on alignment oversight, liability allocation, and integrating fiscal, competition, and labor policy with AI regulation. [ACM]

Granted, the BIS has published a paper on a very specific payments-focused agentic AI use case, I’m looking for papers that focus on policy issues around agentic AI governance and risk mitigation.

FYI I produce a monthly digest of digital fiat currency (DFC) developments exclusively for the official sector (e.g., central banks, ministries of finance and international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank)) plus academics and firms that are active in the DFC space (commercial banks, technology providers, consultants, etc.). (DFCs include central bank digital currency (CBDC), stablecoins and tokenized deposits.) It goes out via email on the first business day of every month, and if you’re interested in being on the mailing list, please email me at john@kiffmeister.com.

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20251105)

Canada Moves to Regulate Stablecoins in New Budget (Decrypt)

The Canadian government will introduce legislation to regulate the issuance of fiat-backed stablecoins in Canada. Under this framework, issuers will be required to maintain and manage adequate asset reserves, establish clear redemption policies, and implement robust risk management systems to protect consumers. The legislation ensures privacy safeguards for Canadians’ sensitive information and includes national security provisions to strengthen trust in the system, making stablecoins safe and secure for individuals and businesses. The Bank of Canada will administer these regulations, retaining $10 million over two years and subsequently $5 million annually, with costs offset by regulated stablecoin issuers. Additionally, the Retail Payment Activities Act will be amended to allow for the regulation of payment service providers conducting payment functions with stablecoins, reinforcing oversight and consumer protection in digital payments.​ [Source: Government of Canada]

Amazon Sues to Stop Perplexity From Using AI Tool to Buy Stuff (Bloomberg)

Amazon has filed a lawsuit against Perplexity AI, demanding that the startup stop allowing its AI browser agent, Comet, to make purchases for users on Amazon’s platform. Amazon alleges that Perplexity violated its terms of service and committed computer fraud by failing to disclose when the AI agent was shopping on behalf of a real person. The dispute, which follows a cease-and-desist letter, highlights the growing tension over the use of agentic AI tools to automate complex online tasks such as shopping, and raises important questions about transparency, competition, and user choice in the evolving landscape of AI-powered web interactions. Perplexity responded by accusing Amazon of using bullying tactics to limit consumer choice and defend its own advertising business, arguing that third-party agents should be allowed to operate on equal footing with human users. [Source: Bloomberg]

Anonymous Quantum Tokens with Classical Verification (arXiv)

Some Google researchers posted a paper on arXiv on the concept of single-use quantum tokens designed for secure, unforgeable, anonymous transactions with classical verification. Leveraging the quantum no-cloning theorem, which states that it is physically impossible to make an exact copy of an unknown quantum state, the authors develop tokens that are identically minted and provide strong privacy guarantees, including the ability of users to verify whether the issuing bank is tracking them through an audit process. The scheme theoretically supports classical verification, which means that all steps to prove the quantum token’s validity require only regular (non-quantum) memory and communication. However, given current technology limitations, only the issuer can check the validity of a token, in contrast to public key schemes, where any user can efficiently verify the tokens. [Source: arXiv]

Upcoming Speaking Engagements:

The Cedi@60 Anniversary Currency Conference (Accra, Ghana, November 17-20) hosted by the Bank of Ghana, in partnership with Currency Research, will celebrate 60 years of the Ghanaian Cedi, bringing together leaders from across Africa and beyond to reflect on the currency’s legacy and chart its digital future. Learn about Ghana’s eCedi pilot and the future of sovereign digital currencies in Africa, and engage with innovators driving mobile money, QR code payments, and financial inclusion across the region. [Register here and get 15% off by using the Kiffmeister15 code!]

The Digital Euro Conference 2026 (Frankfurt, March 26) will explore the future of money with a focus on CBDCs, stablecoins, and commercial bank tokens. This hybrid event offers the perfect platform to understand the future of digital money! [Register here and get 20% off the regular ticket price by using the Kiffmeister20 code!]

I produce a monthly digest of digital fiat currency (DFC) developments exclusively for the official sector (e.g., central banks, ministries of finance and international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank)) plus academics and firms that are active in the DFC space (commercial banks, technology providers, consultants, etc.). (DFCs include central bank digital currency (CBDC), stablecoins and tokenized deposits.) It goes out via email on the first business day of every month, and if you’re interested in being on the mailing list, please email me at john@kiffmeister.com.

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20251028)

Citi and Coinbase Join Forces to Boost Digital Asset Payment Capabilities for Global Clients (Citi)

Citi and Coinbase will collaborate to enhance digital asset payment capabilities for Citi’s institutional global clients, starting with a focus on streamlining fiat pay-ins and pay-outs, and optimizing payment orchestration as a bridge between traditional finance and digital asset ecosystems. The initiative aims to simplify and expand access to 24/7 digital asset payments, with plans to explore new fiat-to-stablecoin payout methods. [Source: Citi]

OpenAI and PayPal Team Up to Power Instant Checkout and Agentic Commerce in ChatGPT (PayPal)

OpenAI and PayPal will collaborate to implement the Agentic Commerce Protocol (ACP) to enable direct payments and commerce within ChatGPT. This will allow ChatGPT users to make instant purchases from PayPal’s global network of merchants, using PayPal’s wallet, payment options, and protections. Merchants who use PayPal will be able to make their product catalogs available on ChatGPT through PayPal’s ACP server, eliminating the need for individual integrations. The arrangement also extends PayPal’s use of OpenAI’s technology across its business operations, including employee access to ChatGPT Enterprise and integration with development tools. The rollout of these integrated commerce and payment features is scheduled to begin in 2026. [Source: PayPal]

Upcoming Speaking Engagements:

The Cedi@60 Anniversary Currency Conference (Accra, Ghana, November 17-20) hosted by the Bank of Ghana, in partnership with Currency Research, will celebrate 60 years of the Ghanaian Cedi, bringing together leaders from across Africa and beyond to reflect on the currency’s legacy and chart its digital future. Learn about Ghana’s eCedi pilot and the future of sovereign digital currencies in Africa, and engage with innovators driving mobile money, QR code payments, and financial inclusion across the region. [Register here]

The Digital Euro Conference 2026 (Frankfurt, March 26) will explore the future of money with a focus on CBDCs, stablecoins, and commercial bank tokens. This hybrid event offers the perfect platform to understand the future of digital money! When you register, get 20% off the regular ticket price by using the Kiffmeister20 code! [register here]

I produce a monthly digest of digital fiat currency (DFC) developments exclusively for the official sector (e.g., central banks, ministries of finance and international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank)) plus academics and firms that are active in the DFC space (commercial banks, technology providers, consultants, etc.). (DFCs include central bank digital currency (CBDC), stablecoins and tokenized deposits.) It goes out via email on the first business day of every month, and if you’re interested in being on the mailing list, please email me at john@kiffmeister.com.

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20250904)

ECB President Calls to Address Risks from Non-EU Stablecoins (Cointelegraph)

European Central Bank (ECB) President Christine Lagarde called for stronger regulation of non-EU stablecoins, warning that gaps in oversight could threaten European Union (EU) financial stability. The EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCAR) addresses some of these risks by requiring stablecoin issuers to allow redemption at par value and to hold substantial bank reserves. However, there are gaps, especially with multi-issuer stablecoins involving both EU and non-EU entities. In such cases in the event of a run, investors would naturally prefer to redeem in the jurisdiction with the strongest safeguards, which is likely to be the EU, where MiCAR also prohibits redemption fees. But the reserves held in the EU may not be sufficient to meet such concentrated demand. She calls for stronger, coordinated international regulatory safeguards to prevent regulatory arbitrage and ensure stability. [Source: ECB]

Börse Stuttgart Launches Pan-European Tokenized Asset Settlement Platform (Börse Stuttgart)

Börse Stuttgart has introduced Seturion, a pan-European settlement platform leveraging blockchain technology to handle tokenized assets. The platform is targeted at banks, brokers, trading venues, and tokenization platforms, enabling significantly faster and more cost-effective transactions across asset classes. Seturion supports settlements on both public and private blockchains, including cash settlement in central bank money and on-chain cash. Having demonstrated its capabilities in European Central Bank (ECB) blockchain trials and with initial use by BX Digital in Switzerland, Seturion is now available for all European trading venues. Börse Stuttgart claims up to 90% savings in settlement costs with this platform and is in the process of securing regulatory approval under the DLT Pilot Regime from Germany’s Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin). [Source: Börse Stuttgart

Federal Reserve Board Payments Innovation Conference (FRB)

The U.S. Federal Reserve Board (FRB) will host a conference on payments innovation on October 21, 2025, to bring together a range of interested parties to discuss how to further innovate and improve the payments system. The conference will feature panel discussions on the convergence of traditional and decentralized finance, emerging stablecoin use cases and business models, the intersection of artificial intelligence and payments, and the tokenization of financial products and services. [Source: FRB]

Upcoming Speaking Engagements:

The CB+DC Conference (Nassau, Bahamas, September 9-11) is a premier gathering centered on CBDCs, tokenized assets, and stablecoins. It provides a forum for central bankers, commercial bankers, technology innovators, policymakers, and academics to explore the latest advancements in digital currency, engage with experts and peers, and discuss the future of digital currency. [Register here but before you do, email me at john@kiffmeister.com for a 15% discount]

Stablecoin NYC 2025 (New York City on November 14-15) will be the definitive conference for exploring the future of digital money and intelligent payments. The event brings together founders, C-level executives, investors, policymakers, and developers for two immersive days of talks, panels, and networking. This be the place to be if you’re building, backing, or regulating the next wave of programmable finance. [Register here]

I produce a monthly digest of digital fiat currency (DFC) developments exclusively for the official sector (e.g., central banks, ministries of finance and international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank)) plus academics and firms that are active in the DFC space (commercial banks, technology providers, consultants, etc.). (DFCs include central bank digital currency (CBDC), stablecoins and tokenized deposits.) It goes out via email on the first business day of every month, and if you’re interested in being on the mailing list, please email me at john@kiffmeister.com.

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20250503)

Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee (TBAC) on digital money

The U.S. Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee (TBAC) published an overview of the potential terminal effects risks of interest-bearing stablecoins and tokenized money funds, from a perspective of Treasury demand, USD hegemony, the expansion of dollar-backed payment stablecoins, and potential effects for insured depository institutions. Also, it’s worth taking a look at Coindesk’s monthly report of central bank digital currency (CBDC) and stablecoins for useful presentations of the raw data. [Read the TBAC here and the Coindesk report here]

Cash and catastrophe: are notes and coins really the best backup? (Substack)

David Birch argues that, contrary to popular belief, cash is not always the most resilient payment method during disasters such as fires, floods, or wars. Drawing on real-world examples-from Japanese tsunamis and Nigerian market fires to the ongoing war in Ukraine-the author shows that people relying on physical cash often suffer greater losses, while digital payment systems, especially those with offline capabilities, tend to be more robust as long as power and communications can be maintained. In Ukraine, for instance, the resilience of the payment system has been bolstered by widespread adoption of softPOS (mobile-based point-of-sale) and contactless technologies, even amid blackouts and cyberattacks. The article concludes that future-proofing payments should focus on enabling device-to-device digital transactions that work without network connectivity, such as offline central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), rather than simply stockpiling cash. [Read more at Substack]

VISA unveils find and buy with AI (VISA)

VISA launched a suite of integrated APIs and a commercial partner program to AI platforms, enabling developers to deploy VISA’s AI commerce capabilities securely and at scale. With VISA Intelligent Commerce, AI agents can find, shop and buy for consumers based on their pre-selected preferences. Each consumer sets the limits, and Visa helps manage the rest.” VISA Intelligent Commerce offers (i) AI-ready cards that replace card details with tokenized digital credentials, (ii) AI-powered consumer personalization (consumers share basic Visa spend and purchase insights with their consent to improve agent performance and personalize shopping recommendations), and (iii) simple and secure AI payments allowing consumers to easily set spending limits and conditions, providing clear guidelines for agent transactions. [Read more at VISA]

Why the future of finance calls for a permissionless architecture (Coinbase)

Coinbase published a paper that argues that the global financial system requires an update built upon permissionless systems, with tokenization at its core. They argue that building on open architecture provides benefits such as instant settlement, elimination of outdated processes, self-custody, increased transparency, improved transaction speed, programmability, and enhanced security and privacy through techniques like zero-knowledge proofs. The paper emphasizes the importance of base layer neutrality for fostering innovation and competition, while also addressing policy considerations such as integrating with traditional finance, enabling the tokenization of traditional assets, and recognizing the right to self-custody. [Read more at Coinbase]

And just a reminder that I produce a monthly digest of central bank digital currency (CBDC) developments exclusively for the official sector. So (only) if you work at a central bank, ministry of finance or international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank) and who would like to receive it by email on the first business day of every month, please DM me on LinkedIn or email me at john@kiffmeister.com.

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20240906)

BCB announces projects selected for the second phase of Drex testing (Ledger Insights)

Banco Central do Brasil (BCB) announced the 13 themes that will be trialed during the second phase of the Drex wholesale central bank digital currency (CBDC) project. The first phase involved testing processes such as issuing, transferring and settling digital treasury bonds with tokenized commercial bank deposits with wholesale CBDC utilized for interbank settlements. During the second phase, various financial services will be developed via smart contracts on the Drex platform created by 16 consortia or companies. The platform is a permissioned Ethereum network using Hyperledger Besu. [Read more at the BCB]

Lessons from India’s Unified Payments Interface (UPI)(SUERF)

Société Universitaire Européenne de Recherches Financières (SUERF) published a note that draws lessons from the success of India’s Unified Payments Interface (UPI). It argues that this success majorly owes to ease of development of applications, easy use and zero-transaction fees for end-users. Further success factors have been strict data protection rules, active partnership with the private sector and adept regulation. The note also discusses the organization of the Indian payment market since the launch of UPI, and the changes in digital payment market in India, with a focus on payment volumes and values. It highlights the increasing investments in the payments market and increased adoption over time, and provides insights into the implications of payment systems for financial inclusion in India, and touches upon some challenges UPI faces. [Read more at SUERF]

Tokenization: another giant leap for securities? (NY Fed)

The U.S. Federal Reserve Bank of New York (NY Fed) published an article that explains what tokenization is and how it works, and looks at how past innovation in financial markets might offer lessons for the future. Multiple successful experiments show efficiencies in a completely tokenized world—where money and securities are all tokenized and settlement can be automated and synchronized with smart contracts. Change takes time, and there may be a period of years where tokenized money would need to interact with traditional securities, or vice versa. As an example, the article points to the Swiss National Bank (SNB) Project Helvetia which initially tried to link the existing payment system to a tokenized securities system, but found that without tokenized cash operational burdens were added, not reduced. Hence, when Helvetia went live, it did so with wholesale CBDC. [Read more at the NY Fed]

Focusing on users: lessons for Canada’s CBDC from the digital euro and digital pound (CIGI)

The Centre for International Governance (CIGI) published Ori Freiman’s paper that explores how Canada can craft a responsible and user-centric approach to its digital loonie project. It emphasizes meaningful public engagement in both technical design and regulatory processes — drawing from the U.K. and European Union (EU) consultative approaches. It also highlights the importance of responsible personal data handling and clear regulatory language, learning from EU expectations and UK legislative concerns. It concludes with recommendations that span across five key areas, critical to the successful integration of the digital loonie within the fabric of society; the developmental approach, engagement strategy, regulation and consumer protection, regulatory novelty and further research. [Read more at CIGI]

AI and Central Banks—Speeding Ahead within Legal Guardrails (IMF)

International Monetary Fund (IMF) staff published a short note that highlights the legal challenges concerning central banks’ governance, transparency, and accountability in central banks’ AI exploration, first covered in a 2021 IMF Fintech Note. AI can significantly strengthen central banks’ agility to predict and mitigate crises and improve monetary policy implementation, as well as the regulation and supervision of financial institutions. However, the use of AI tools could pose risks and challenges to central banks’ governance, data privacy, intellectual property, cybersecurity, and legal liability. An effective AI journey for central banks requires completion of ‘AI legal checkpoints’: is there an effective oversight function? Is there adequate expertise? Are central banks’ decisions relating to AI transparently disclosed? Do central banks remain accountable for their actions? Central banks should carefully assess if their legal frameworks are adequate to ensure they are well equipped for their AI journey. [Read more at the Oxford Business Law Blog]

I don’t consider AI a “Fintech” issue but I have recently started to track the topic, mainly from a central banking policy perspective. I’ve been collecting them here: https://www.diigo.com/user/kiffmeister?query=%23AI.

Upcoming Speaking Engagements:

  • CBDC Conference, Istanbul, September 10-12. The conference will offer representatives of central banks, commercial banks, technology providers, policy makers and academics the perfect platform to learn about the latest CBDC developments, exchange ideas with experts and peers. [Find out more and register here][Central bank delegates may be eligible for free registration (email registration@cbdc-conference.com to find out more)]
  • Digital Currency Conference, London, September 23-24. The conference will bring together policymakers, regulators, and technology and innovation experts to network and discuss all aspects of digital currencies. And enter the KiffmeisterDCC code at registration to get a 20% discount! [Find out more and register here]

And just a reminder that I produce a monthly digest of central bank digital currency (CBDC) developments exclusively for the official sector. So (only) if you work at a central bank, ministry of finance or international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank) and who would like to receive it by email on the first business day of every month, please DM me on LinkedIn or email me at john@kiffmeister.com.

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20240614)

2023 BIS survey on central bank digital currencies and crypto

94% of the 86 central banks surveyed (between October 2023 and January 2024) by the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) are exploring central bank digital currency (CBDC). 54% are experimenting with proofs of concept and 31% are running a pilot. Around 30% of central banks focus on retail CBDCs only and 2% are working on wholesale CBDCs only, and it is more likely that central banks will issue a wholesale CBDC within the next six years than retail CBDC. More emerging market and developing economy (EMDE) central banks are likely to issue a retail CBDC on a distributed ledger than advanced economy (AE) central banks, perhaps reflecting a willingness to leapfrog moving from legacy systems to cutting-edge technologies. Also, this year the survey also provides insight into the use of stablecoins for payments and regulatory approaches to crypto-assets across the globe. [Read more at the BIS]

European Central Bank on making the digital euro truly private

The European Central Bank (ECB) published a blog post that explains what degrees of payments privacy future users of a digital euro can expect. It claims that it will promise better privacy and data protection than other current electronic means of payment, but not the same degree of privacy as cash although paying with an “offline digital euro” comes pretty close. Online digital euro payments will not be so private, because the commercial banks that run the user-facing parts of the platform will have full access to user identity and transaction information, just like they currently do on their own platforms. However, digital euro holder identities will be separated from the payment data, and the banks will pseudonymize user data so they are not visible to the Eurosystem. [Read more at the ECB]

Bank of Thailand to test programmable payments in enhanced sandbox

The Bank of Thailand (BoT) will test programmable payments in its Enhanced Regulatory Sandbox. Programmable payments automate transaction with predefined conditions for the payment of goods and services. This project will demonstrate the potential for applying technology to a wide variety of financial services, accompanied by appropriate risk management processes. The BOT will work in collaboration with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Office of Insurance Commission, and the Fiscal Policy Office, Ministry of Finance, to evaluate the benefits and risks of financial innovations and to establish potential and suitable supervisory policies. [Read more at the BOT]

Are CBDCs quantum safe?

BitMint CEO Amnon Samid argues that CBDCs that rely on blockchain or distributed-ledger tech (DLT) will soon be cryptographically compromised by the power of quantum computers and artificial intelligence. Amnon argues that central banks should secure digital cash as token- or value-based digital representations, instead of designing systems that rely on traditional accounts as used by the commercial banking system. [Podcast on DigFin]

Upcoming Speaking Engagements:

  • CBDC Conference, Istanbul, September 10-12. The conference will offer representatives of central banks, commercial banks, technology providers, policy makers and academics the perfect platform to learn about the latest CBDC developments, exchange ideas with experts and peers. [Find out more and register here][Central bank delegates may be eligible for free registration (email registration@cbdc-conference.com to find out more)]
  • Digital Currency Conference, London, September 23-24. The conference will bring together policymakers, regulators, and technology and innovation experts to network and discuss all aspects of digital currencies. And enter the KiffmeisterDCC code at registration to get a 20% discount! [Find out more and register here]

And just a reminder that I produce a monthly digest of central bank digital currency (CBDC) developments exclusively for the official sector. So (only) if you work at a central bank, ministry of finance or international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank) and who would like to receive it by email on the first business day of every month, please DM me on LinkedIn or email me at john@kiffmeister.com.

Kiffmeister’s #Fintech Daily Digest (20240328)*

DC Summit: Generative Artificial Intelligence & Finance

The Washington DC Summit on Generative AI and Finance will be held on April 20 during the week of the IMF/World Bank Spring Meetings at George Washington University’s Jack Morton Auditorium. It will start with a set of lectures in the morning, and be followed by a series of panels in the afternoon. Plus there will be food and drinks, and networking opportunities. To register, go to DCSummit.org where you will also see the draft agenda, list of speakers and schedule.

CBDC and other digital payments in Sub-Saharan Africa: A regional survey

The IMF published a Fintech Note on key findings from the Sub-Saharan Africa CBDC and Digital Payments Survey, shedding light on the motivations, benefits, and challenges of CBDC adoption, as well as the developments of digital private money and crypto assets in sub-Saharan Africa. More than 75% of the 33 central banks surveyed are engaged in—or are planning to engage in—CBDC research or pilot activities. Of these, roughly two-thirds are in the research phase, and slightly over one-third are planning to conclude their CBDC pilot programs within the next two years. More than a quarter are actively preparing to launch a CBDC by 2028, although legal challenges pose major hurdles to getting to that point. Financial inclusion, efficiency in domestic payments and facilitating remittances’ are the most dominant motivations for CBDC adoption. Fast payment systems and e-Money (such as mobile money) are considered as quick wins in sub-Saharan Africa, and about two-thirds of countries are in the process of implementing or considering fast payment systems that are mostly accessible through mobile phones or the internet. [Read more at the IMF]

A macroeconomic model of central bank digital currency

A paper by a couple of San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank staff (Pascal Paul and Mauricio Ulate) published a paper that uses a New Keynesian DSGE model to study the introduction of a remunerated retail central bank digital currency (CBDC). At the heart of the model are monopolistic banks with market power in deposit and loan markets. When a remunerated retail CBDC is introduced, households benefit from an expansion of liquidity services and higher deposit rates as bank deposit market power is curtailed. However, even though deposits also flow out of the banking system and bank lending contracts, the paper finds substantial welfare gains as long as the CBDC interest rate doesn’t exceed the policy rate minus 1%. [Read more on Pascal Paul’s blog]

Connectedness between CBDC, financial stability and digital assets

The Journal of International Financial Markets, Institutions and Money (JIFMIM) published a paper that examines the interconnectedness CBDC development and adoption levels, digital asset returns and financial stability. (CBDC development and adoption was measured with a news media coverage based “CBDC Uncertainty Index” developed by Wang et al (2022).) The paper finds a significant level of connectedness between CBDCs, digital assets and financial stability, but only a weak positive connectedness between CBDCs and returns on digital assets. Furthermore, the study finds bidirectional connectedness between CBDCs and other financial stability measures, suggesting that changes in CBDC performance can influence the overall stability of the financial system, and vice versa. [Read more at the JIFMIM]

*For those interested in intra-day updates, check out my searchable Diigo Fintech developments database, which is also a good place to go to query for past developments: https://www.diigo.com/user/kiffmeister/ART.

Kiffmeister’s central bank digital currency monthly monitor

Just a reminder that I produce a monthly digest of central bank digital currency (CBDC) developments exclusively for the official sector. So (only) if you work at a central bank, ministry of finance or international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank) and who would like to receive it by email on the first business day of every month, please DM me on LinkedIn or email me at chronicles@kiffmeister.com

The Sovereign Official Digital Association (SODA) is a technology-agnostic firm offering advisory services at the intersection of central banking, digital finance and the web3 industry, aiming to make public digital money a reality. SODA believes institutions in the existing financial ecosystem should have access to the tools and resources they need to move from discussion to action. SODA offers ‘real life’ use cases to help test digital money and drive adoption as central banks and other public institutions explore the future of a more financially inclusive world powered by interoperable blockchain-based networks. SODA would love you to join us on this journey – please get in touch (chris@sodapublicmoney.org).

Satoshi Capital Advisors is a New York-based, global advisory firm that works with central banks, governments, and the private sector to architect, implement, and operate varying initiatives. Satoshi Capital Advisors’ central bank work revolves around CBDC architecture and implementation, providing advisory services from research phase through to growth phase. Utilizing a product-market fit and technology agnostic approach to CBDC architecture and implementation enables Satoshi Capital Advisors to build tailored solutions, bespoke to local financial system nuances. Satoshi Capital Advisors welcomes requests from central bank officials for virtual and in-person CBDC workshops. [Click here for more information]

WhisperCash offers the first fully offline digital currency platform that has the same properties as physical cash. It can perform secure consecutive offline payments without compromising on security, privacy or accessibility. WhisperCash allows direct person to person offline payments without any server infrastructure or internet connectivity. It comes in various form factors including the self-contained credit card-sized “Pro” that sports an eInk screen and capacitive keyboard, and lasts for two weeks between recharges assuming a few transactions per day. [Click here for more information]