The silver
price prediction landscape has shifted dramatically since January's record. The
Reuters poll of analysts now projects a 2026 average of $79.50 per ounce, up
from $50 as recently as October 2025. Yet the most interesting signal is not
coming from the price chart at all. It is coming from the physical market,
where COMEX registered inventory has fallen to levels that exchange analysts
flag as stress territory.
This week
brings catalysts that may break the stalemate: FOMC minutes on April 8, Q4 GDP
with core PCE data on April 9, and the approaching U.S.-imposed deadline on
Iran. The Fed holds rates at 3.50-3.75%, and CME Group data shows a 0%
probability of an April cut.
Follow
me on X for real-time market analysis: @ChmielDk
Why Silver Is Stuck? Iran,
the Fed, and the Rate Trap
Silver's
40% decline from the January peak is not a straightforward correction. It is
the result of the same paradox that hit gold: an active Middle East conflict
that should theoretically support precious metals is instead suppressing them
through the monetary policy channel. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz sent
crude surging, which fed inflation expectations, pushed Treasury yields to the
4.3-4.4% range, and strengthened the dollar. For a non-yielding metal like
silver, all three are headwinds.
Bas
Kooijman, CEO and Asset Manager of DHF Capital S.A., confirms that silver
prices traded sideways extending a period of consolidation as investors
remained cautious ahead of key geopolitical developments. The approaching
U.S.-imposed deadline on Iran is heightening uncertainty and discouraging
aggressive positioning, he notes. Kooijman adds that recent Federal Reserve
remarks further anchor this narrative, with policymakers emphasizing inflation
risks over labor market concerns, reinforcing expectations that rates could
remain unchanged for longer. Forecasts now largely discard the possibility of
rate cuts this year.
Despite
these headwinds, the broader structural backdrop remains constructive. Kooijman
points out that the silver market is expected to post a sixth consecutive
annual supply deficit. Attention now turns to the release of the FOMC minutes
and key inflation indicators, he notes, adding that the data could be crucial
in determining the direction of silver prices.
The U.S.
economy added 178,000 jobs in March, the strongest nonfarm payroll gain in over
a year. As the March 20 Finance Magnates analysis
of why silver was crashing documented, the hawkish Fed hold in March, which revised 2026 dot-plot
projections down to just one cut, hit silver harder than gold. The white metal
had rallied from $40 to $121 in roughly fourteen months almost entirely on
dovish Fed expectations and dollar weakness, making it acutely vulnerable to a
policy repricing.
COMEX Inventory Tightness:
The Bullish Signal Price Is Ignoring
While the
silver price has been declining, the physical delivery data has moved in the
opposite direction. According to BloFin Research, COMEX registered silver
inventory, the metal carrying warehouse warrants that is immediately available
for delivery, stood at approximately 76 million ounces as of late March 2026.
Against total silver futures open interest of approximately 576 million ounces,
that implies a coverage ratio of just 13.4%.
The March
2026 delivery cycle was unusually large: approximately 9,212 contracts equal to
roughly 46.1 million ounces of physical silver. That figure represents
approximately 60.6% of the entire current registered stock absorbed in a single
delivery month. The registered inventory drawdown has been accelerating since
late 2025.
Technical Analysis of the
Silver Price Chart
Based on my
over 15 years of experience as an analyst and trader, the silver chart on April
7, 2026, shows a market trapped within two overlapping consolidation structures
that together define the range to watch.
My chart
shows the first consolidation is bounded by the key moving averages. The 50
EMA, marked in red on my chart, is acting as resistance near $78 per ounce. The
200 MA, marked in blue, provides the slower structural support near $63. This
level was tested on March 23 and rejected by price, but the upper band at the
50 EMA has not yet been broken either. The space between these two averages
defines the primary technical battleground.
The second
channel is defined by local price action. The upper boundary sits at the early
March highs near $94 per ounce. The lower boundary runs through the round $70
level. Between March 19 and March 30, price attempted to break below $70
repeatedly, balancing above and below this level across multiple sessions.
Ultimately, $70 held and the breakdown proved false. As the March 20 Finance Magnates silver
crash analysis
confirmed, $70 has now held for the third time since the start of 2026.
How high can silver go? Source: Tradingview.com
Together
with the moving averages, these channels create a combined structure that
defines the current setup.
Level
Type
Notes
$121.64
All-time high
January 29 intraday peak
$94
Resistance (local highs)
Early
March peaks, upper channel boundary
$78
50 EMA resistance
Red line
on my chart, current battle zone
$72.88
Current price
April 7, 2026
$70
Support (round level)
Lower
channel boundary, held 3 times in 2026
$63
200 MA support
Blue line
on my chart, structural floor
$54
Bear case target
October
2025 high, downside on channel break
My
directional bias is neutral within the range but fundamentally constructive.
The technicals alone say: wait for a break. If silver exits these channels to
the downside, breaking below $63 and the 200 MA on a sustained basis, the path
opens toward $54, the October 2025 high. That level represents the next major
structural support below the current consolidation.
If silver
breaks to the upside, clearing the 50 EMA near $78 and then the $94 local
highs, the path reopens toward the $120 zone tested in late January. As the February 10 Finance Magnates
analysis of Bank of America's $309 silver prediction documented, my previous Fibonacci
targets above $100 remain valid for the broader cycle but require a clean
breakout above $94 to reactivate.
The COMEX
physical data, however, tilts the probability toward the upside resolution. A
13.4% coverage ratio and a 12-13% SHFE premium are not typical of a market
about to break lower.
Silver Price Prediction
2026: What Analysts Are Targeting?
The range
of silver price predictions for 2026 is extraordinarily wide, reflecting both
the unprecedented nature of recent price action and genuine analytical
disagreement about whether the paper pricing mechanism can continue to diverge
from physical fundamentals.
The Reuters
poll now projects a 2026 average silver price of $79.50 per ounce, as the February 18 Finance Magnates silver
and gold forecast
established. That same poll projected $50 just in October 2025. The gap between
those two numbers mirrors the speed at which the silver market changed.
Bank of
America's Michael Widmer maintains one of the most extreme institutional
forecasts, projecting silver could reach between $135 and $309 per ounce based
on historical gold-to-silver ratio compression. As the February 10 Finance Magnates
analysis detailed,
the gold-silver ratio currently sits near 64:1. A return to the 2011 extreme of
32:1 would mathematically support silver at roughly $146 per ounce given gold
at $4,685. Citigroup's $150 target, published January 29, rests on a similar
thesis but with a three-month time horizon that has since expired without being
met.
At the
extreme bull end, macro strategist David Hunter targets $180 for silver, while
Robert Kiyosaki's $200 forecast sits alongside Tom Bradshaw's $375 by 2028.
Source
Target
Key Assumption
Bank of America (Widmer)
$135-$309
Gold-silver
ratio compression to 32:1
David Hunter
$180
Q2 2026 metals breakout
Citigroup
$150-$170
Gold-silver
ratio + Chinese demand
GoldSilver (Hibbard)
$175+
Outperformance vs. 2025
Robert Kiyosaki
$200
Fiat currency crisis thesis
Reuters poll (analysts)
$79.50 avg
Highest
consensus in recent history
Silver Institute
Deficit continues
6th
consecutive annual deficit, 67M oz
JPMorgan
$81 avg
Conservative base case
Bear case (my TA)
$54
October
2025 high on channel break
How High Can Silver Go?
Bull and Bear Scenarios
The bull
case for silver in 2026 rests on the convergence of physical tightness and
structural industrial demand. COMEX registered inventory at 13.4% coverage, a
persistent 12-13% SHFE premium, and a sixth consecutive annual supply deficit
create conditions where a relatively small increase in physical demand could
force a significant repricing. As Kooijman from DHF Capital notes, the
structural backdrop remains constructive despite near-term headwinds from rates
and the dollar.
Industrial
demand continues to build. China's silver imports reached 206.76 tonnes in the
first two months of 2026, the highest level in eight years, as the February 23 Finance Magnates
analysis of silver surging with gold documented. Data centers, EV production, and
AI infrastructure are all growing end-uses for the metal. The Silver Institute
projects physical investment demand rising 20% in 2026 to 227 million ounces, a
three-year high.
If the Fed
delivers rate cuts in the second half of 2026, weakening the dollar and
compressing real yields, silver's dual identity as both safe-haven and
industrial metal positions it for outsized gains. The $94 resistance on my
chart is the first gate; a clean break reopens the $120 zone.
The bear
case requires continued monetary hawkishness, a strengthening dollar, and
resolution of geopolitical tensions that removes the risk premium. If Treasury
yields stay above 4% and the Fed holds rates into year-end, silver could
struggle to break above the 50 EMA at $78 and eventually test the 200 MA at
$63. A sustained break below that level, which has not been tested since March
23, targets $54. That scenario aligns with the broader paper liquidation risk
that BloFin Research acknowledges: in a macro risk-off environment, futures
prices can continue falling regardless of what physical inventories are doing.
The January 20 Finance Magnates analysis
of silver and gold surging together established an important warning: silver
showed bubble-like characteristics at the January highs, with Bank of America
ranking it highest for bubble-like asset dynamics. Solar panel manufacturers
are actively reducing silver content per unit to cut costs, and jewelry demand
continues weakening in key Asian markets as high prices squeeze affordability. Those
structural offsets cap the most extreme upside forecasts.
FAQ
How high can silver go in
2026?
Silver
price predictions for 2026 range from JPMorgan's $81 average to Bank of
America's $309 bull case based on gold-silver ratio compression. The Reuters
poll projects an average of $79.50 per ounce. Silver's all-time high of $121.64
was reached on January 29, 2026. Extreme outlier forecasts include Robert
Kiyosaki's $200 and Tom Bradshaw's $375 by 2028. The bear case on my chart
targets $54 if the $63 support breaks.
Why is silver going up in
2026?
Silver's
2026 gains are driven by three forces: physical supply tightness (COMEX
registered inventory at 13.4% coverage with a 12-13% SHFE premium), a sixth
consecutive annual supply deficit projected at 67 million ounces by the Silver
Institute, and industrial demand from data centers, EVs, and solar panels.
China's silver imports reached their highest level in eight years in early
2026.
What is the silver price
prediction for the rest of 2026?
Reuters
projects a $79.50 average, Bank of America targets $135-$309, Citigroup set a
$150-$170 target, and macro strategist David Hunter sees $180. On the downside,
my technical analysis shows $54 as the bear case target if the $70 support and
$63 200-day MA fail. The next key catalysts are FOMC minutes on April 8 and PCE
inflation data on April 9.
Why did silver crash from
its all-time high?
Silver fell
40% from its $121.64 January 29 peak due to CME margin hikes, hawkish Fed
repricing (dot plot revised to one 2026 cut from two), the Iran conflict
pushing oil higher and strengthening the dollar, and massive leveraged long
liquidation. The crash was amplified by silver's tendency to move roughly 3x
gold's percentage moves in both directions.
Is silver a better
investment than gold in 2026?
Silver has
outperformed gold over the past year with a roughly 150% gain versus gold's
approximately 56%. However, silver is significantly more volatile. Silver's
industrial demand (solar, EVs, AI infrastructure) provides a growth component
that gold lacks, while COMEX physical tightness supports the supply-squeeze
thesis. The gold-silver ratio at 64:1 suggests silver remains historically
undervalued relative to gold, but the bear case for a 25% decline to $54 is
more severe than gold's comparable downside scenario.
The silver
price prediction landscape has shifted dramatically since January's record. The
Reuters poll of analysts now projects a 2026 average of $79.50 per ounce, up
from $50 as recently as October 2025. Yet the most interesting signal is not
coming from the price chart at all. It is coming from the physical market,
where COMEX registered inventory has fallen to levels that exchange analysts
flag as stress territory.
This week
brings catalysts that may break the stalemate: FOMC minutes on April 8, Q4 GDP
with core PCE data on April 9, and the approaching U.S.-imposed deadline on
Iran. The Fed holds rates at 3.50-3.75%, and CME Group data shows a 0%
probability of an April cut.
Follow
me on X for real-time market analysis: @ChmielDk
Why Silver Is Stuck? Iran,
the Fed, and the Rate Trap
Silver's
40% decline from the January peak is not a straightforward correction. It is
the result of the same paradox that hit gold: an active Middle East conflict
that should theoretically support precious metals is instead suppressing them
through the monetary policy channel. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz sent
crude surging, which fed inflation expectations, pushed Treasury yields to the
4.3-4.4% range, and strengthened the dollar. For a non-yielding metal like
silver, all three are headwinds.
Bas
Kooijman, CEO and Asset Manager of DHF Capital S.A., confirms that silver
prices traded sideways extending a period of consolidation as investors
remained cautious ahead of key geopolitical developments. The approaching
U.S.-imposed deadline on Iran is heightening uncertainty and discouraging
aggressive positioning, he notes. Kooijman adds that recent Federal Reserve
remarks further anchor this narrative, with policymakers emphasizing inflation
risks over labor market concerns, reinforcing expectations that rates could
remain unchanged for longer. Forecasts now largely discard the possibility of
rate cuts this year.
Despite
these headwinds, the broader structural backdrop remains constructive. Kooijman
points out that the silver market is expected to post a sixth consecutive
annual supply deficit. Attention now turns to the release of the FOMC minutes
and key inflation indicators, he notes, adding that the data could be crucial
in determining the direction of silver prices.
The U.S.
economy added 178,000 jobs in March, the strongest nonfarm payroll gain in over
a year. As the March 20 Finance Magnates analysis
of why silver was crashing documented, the hawkish Fed hold in March, which revised 2026 dot-plot
projections down to just one cut, hit silver harder than gold. The white metal
had rallied from $40 to $121 in roughly fourteen months almost entirely on
dovish Fed expectations and dollar weakness, making it acutely vulnerable to a
policy repricing.
COMEX Inventory Tightness:
The Bullish Signal Price Is Ignoring
While the
silver price has been declining, the physical delivery data has moved in the
opposite direction. According to BloFin Research, COMEX registered silver
inventory, the metal carrying warehouse warrants that is immediately available
for delivery, stood at approximately 76 million ounces as of late March 2026.
Against total silver futures open interest of approximately 576 million ounces,
that implies a coverage ratio of just 13.4%.
The March
2026 delivery cycle was unusually large: approximately 9,212 contracts equal to
roughly 46.1 million ounces of physical silver. That figure represents
approximately 60.6% of the entire current registered stock absorbed in a single
delivery month. The registered inventory drawdown has been accelerating since
late 2025.
Technical Analysis of the
Silver Price Chart
Based on my
over 15 years of experience as an analyst and trader, the silver chart on April
7, 2026, shows a market trapped within two overlapping consolidation structures
that together define the range to watch.
My chart
shows the first consolidation is bounded by the key moving averages. The 50
EMA, marked in red on my chart, is acting as resistance near $78 per ounce. The
200 MA, marked in blue, provides the slower structural support near $63. This
level was tested on March 23 and rejected by price, but the upper band at the
50 EMA has not yet been broken either. The space between these two averages
defines the primary technical battleground.
The second
channel is defined by local price action. The upper boundary sits at the early
March highs near $94 per ounce. The lower boundary runs through the round $70
level. Between March 19 and March 30, price attempted to break below $70
repeatedly, balancing above and below this level across multiple sessions.
Ultimately, $70 held and the breakdown proved false. As the March 20 Finance Magnates silver
crash analysis
confirmed, $70 has now held for the third time since the start of 2026.
How high can silver go? Source: Tradingview.com
Together
with the moving averages, these channels create a combined structure that
defines the current setup.
Level
Type
Notes
$121.64
All-time high
January 29 intraday peak
$94
Resistance (local highs)
Early
March peaks, upper channel boundary
$78
50 EMA resistance
Red line
on my chart, current battle zone
$72.88
Current price
April 7, 2026
$70
Support (round level)
Lower
channel boundary, held 3 times in 2026
$63
200 MA support
Blue line
on my chart, structural floor
$54
Bear case target
October
2025 high, downside on channel break
My
directional bias is neutral within the range but fundamentally constructive.
The technicals alone say: wait for a break. If silver exits these channels to
the downside, breaking below $63 and the 200 MA on a sustained basis, the path
opens toward $54, the October 2025 high. That level represents the next major
structural support below the current consolidation.
If silver
breaks to the upside, clearing the 50 EMA near $78 and then the $94 local
highs, the path reopens toward the $120 zone tested in late January. As the February 10 Finance Magnates
analysis of Bank of America's $309 silver prediction documented, my previous Fibonacci
targets above $100 remain valid for the broader cycle but require a clean
breakout above $94 to reactivate.
The COMEX
physical data, however, tilts the probability toward the upside resolution. A
13.4% coverage ratio and a 12-13% SHFE premium are not typical of a market
about to break lower.
Silver Price Prediction
2026: What Analysts Are Targeting?
The range
of silver price predictions for 2026 is extraordinarily wide, reflecting both
the unprecedented nature of recent price action and genuine analytical
disagreement about whether the paper pricing mechanism can continue to diverge
from physical fundamentals.
The Reuters
poll now projects a 2026 average silver price of $79.50 per ounce, as the February 18 Finance Magnates silver
and gold forecast
established. That same poll projected $50 just in October 2025. The gap between
those two numbers mirrors the speed at which the silver market changed.
Bank of
America's Michael Widmer maintains one of the most extreme institutional
forecasts, projecting silver could reach between $135 and $309 per ounce based
on historical gold-to-silver ratio compression. As the February 10 Finance Magnates
analysis detailed,
the gold-silver ratio currently sits near 64:1. A return to the 2011 extreme of
32:1 would mathematically support silver at roughly $146 per ounce given gold
at $4,685. Citigroup's $150 target, published January 29, rests on a similar
thesis but with a three-month time horizon that has since expired without being
met.
At the
extreme bull end, macro strategist David Hunter targets $180 for silver, while
Robert Kiyosaki's $200 forecast sits alongside Tom Bradshaw's $375 by 2028.
Source
Target
Key Assumption
Bank of America (Widmer)
$135-$309
Gold-silver
ratio compression to 32:1
David Hunter
$180
Q2 2026 metals breakout
Citigroup
$150-$170
Gold-silver
ratio + Chinese demand
GoldSilver (Hibbard)
$175+
Outperformance vs. 2025
Robert Kiyosaki
$200
Fiat currency crisis thesis
Reuters poll (analysts)
$79.50 avg
Highest
consensus in recent history
Silver Institute
Deficit continues
6th
consecutive annual deficit, 67M oz
JPMorgan
$81 avg
Conservative base case
Bear case (my TA)
$54
October
2025 high on channel break
How High Can Silver Go?
Bull and Bear Scenarios
The bull
case for silver in 2026 rests on the convergence of physical tightness and
structural industrial demand. COMEX registered inventory at 13.4% coverage, a
persistent 12-13% SHFE premium, and a sixth consecutive annual supply deficit
create conditions where a relatively small increase in physical demand could
force a significant repricing. As Kooijman from DHF Capital notes, the
structural backdrop remains constructive despite near-term headwinds from rates
and the dollar.
Industrial
demand continues to build. China's silver imports reached 206.76 tonnes in the
first two months of 2026, the highest level in eight years, as the February 23 Finance Magnates
analysis of silver surging with gold documented. Data centers, EV production, and
AI infrastructure are all growing end-uses for the metal. The Silver Institute
projects physical investment demand rising 20% in 2026 to 227 million ounces, a
three-year high.
If the Fed
delivers rate cuts in the second half of 2026, weakening the dollar and
compressing real yields, silver's dual identity as both safe-haven and
industrial metal positions it for outsized gains. The $94 resistance on my
chart is the first gate; a clean break reopens the $120 zone.
The bear
case requires continued monetary hawkishness, a strengthening dollar, and
resolution of geopolitical tensions that removes the risk premium. If Treasury
yields stay above 4% and the Fed holds rates into year-end, silver could
struggle to break above the 50 EMA at $78 and eventually test the 200 MA at
$63. A sustained break below that level, which has not been tested since March
23, targets $54. That scenario aligns with the broader paper liquidation risk
that BloFin Research acknowledges: in a macro risk-off environment, futures
prices can continue falling regardless of what physical inventories are doing.
The January 20 Finance Magnates analysis
of silver and gold surging together established an important warning: silver
showed bubble-like characteristics at the January highs, with Bank of America
ranking it highest for bubble-like asset dynamics. Solar panel manufacturers
are actively reducing silver content per unit to cut costs, and jewelry demand
continues weakening in key Asian markets as high prices squeeze affordability. Those
structural offsets cap the most extreme upside forecasts.
FAQ
How high can silver go in
2026?
Silver
price predictions for 2026 range from JPMorgan's $81 average to Bank of
America's $309 bull case based on gold-silver ratio compression. The Reuters
poll projects an average of $79.50 per ounce. Silver's all-time high of $121.64
was reached on January 29, 2026. Extreme outlier forecasts include Robert
Kiyosaki's $200 and Tom Bradshaw's $375 by 2028. The bear case on my chart
targets $54 if the $63 support breaks.
Why is silver going up in
2026?
Silver's
2026 gains are driven by three forces: physical supply tightness (COMEX
registered inventory at 13.4% coverage with a 12-13% SHFE premium), a sixth
consecutive annual supply deficit projected at 67 million ounces by the Silver
Institute, and industrial demand from data centers, EVs, and solar panels.
China's silver imports reached their highest level in eight years in early
2026.
What is the silver price
prediction for the rest of 2026?
Reuters
projects a $79.50 average, Bank of America targets $135-$309, Citigroup set a
$150-$170 target, and macro strategist David Hunter sees $180. On the downside,
my technical analysis shows $54 as the bear case target if the $70 support and
$63 200-day MA fail. The next key catalysts are FOMC minutes on April 8 and PCE
inflation data on April 9.
Why did silver crash from
its all-time high?
Silver fell
40% from its $121.64 January 29 peak due to CME margin hikes, hawkish Fed
repricing (dot plot revised to one 2026 cut from two), the Iran conflict
pushing oil higher and strengthening the dollar, and massive leveraged long
liquidation. The crash was amplified by silver's tendency to move roughly 3x
gold's percentage moves in both directions.
Is silver a better
investment than gold in 2026?
Silver has
outperformed gold over the past year with a roughly 150% gain versus gold's
approximately 56%. However, silver is significantly more volatile. Silver's
industrial demand (solar, EVs, AI infrastructure) provides a growth component
that gold lacks, while COMEX physical tightness supports the supply-squeeze
thesis. The gold-silver ratio at 64:1 suggests silver remains historically
undervalued relative to gold, but the bear case for a 25% decline to $54 is
more severe than gold's comparable downside scenario.
Damian Chmiel is a Senior Analyst & Editor at Finance Magnates with more than 15 years of experience in the CFD and online trading industry. Active as both a trader and journalist since 2010, he focuses on broker coverage, fintech innovation, and regulatory developments across Europe, the Middle East, and Asia.
His work includes interviews with C-level leaders at major brokerages and fintech platforms, as well as co-authoring Finance Magnates’ quarterly industry benchmarking reports. Damian’s reporting is data-driven, market-aware, and grounded in direct industry engagement. His analysis and commentary have also been cited by external media outlets, including Investing.com, Binance, The Asset, Stockhead, and Dispatch.
Education:
MA in Finance and Accounting, Cracow University of Economics
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Here is our conversation with Vinay Trivedi, CEO of SGX CurrencyNode, on Singapore's growing role in global FX markets, exchange innovation, and the future of institutional liquidity.
We begin with Singapore's rise as one of the world's leading foreign exchange centers and discuss the role SGX plays in an ecosystem traditionally dominated by OTC trading. Vinay explains how SGX has expanded its footprint across exchange-traded and OTC markets, building a comprehensive suite of solutions spanning execution, distribution, risk management, market data, and liquidity provision.
The conversation then turns to innovation and digital assets. Vinay shares how SGX has embraced blockchain initiatives, collaborated on tokenization projects, and launched institutional crypto derivatives to bridge the gap between traditional finance and digital asset markets. We explore how exchanges can adapt to emerging technologies while maintaining the infrastructure, governance, and trust expected by institutional participants.
We also discuss the relationship between SGX and the retail trading ecosystem. Vinay outlines the exchange's efforts to support broker growth through education, technology, and liquidity solutions, while highlighting the importance of retail participation in building vibrant and sustainable capital markets.
Finally, we look ahead to the second half of the year and the challenges facing market participants in an increasingly volatile environment. From geopolitical uncertainty and commodity price swings to shifting macroeconomic trends, Vinay explains why the industry's focus must remain on providing resilient infrastructure, deep liquidity, and efficient risk management tools for every segment of the market.
Here is our conversation with Vinay Trivedi, CEO of SGX CurrencyNode, on Singapore's growing role in global FX markets, exchange innovation, and the future of institutional liquidity.
We begin with Singapore's rise as one of the world's leading foreign exchange centers and discuss the role SGX plays in an ecosystem traditionally dominated by OTC trading. Vinay explains how SGX has expanded its footprint across exchange-traded and OTC markets, building a comprehensive suite of solutions spanning execution, distribution, risk management, market data, and liquidity provision.
The conversation then turns to innovation and digital assets. Vinay shares how SGX has embraced blockchain initiatives, collaborated on tokenization projects, and launched institutional crypto derivatives to bridge the gap between traditional finance and digital asset markets. We explore how exchanges can adapt to emerging technologies while maintaining the infrastructure, governance, and trust expected by institutional participants.
We also discuss the relationship between SGX and the retail trading ecosystem. Vinay outlines the exchange's efforts to support broker growth through education, technology, and liquidity solutions, while highlighting the importance of retail participation in building vibrant and sustainable capital markets.
Finally, we look ahead to the second half of the year and the challenges facing market participants in an increasingly volatile environment. From geopolitical uncertainty and commodity price swings to shifting macroeconomic trends, Vinay explains why the industry's focus must remain on providing resilient infrastructure, deep liquidity, and efficient risk management tools for every segment of the market.
Here is our conversation with Vinay Trivedi, CEO of SGX CurrencyNode, on Singapore's growing role in global FX markets, exchange innovation, and the future of institutional liquidity.
We begin with Singapore's rise as one of the world's leading foreign exchange centers and discuss the role SGX plays in an ecosystem traditionally dominated by OTC trading. Vinay explains how SGX has expanded its footprint across exchange-traded and OTC markets, building a comprehensive suite of solutions spanning execution, distribution, risk management, market data, and liquidity provision.
The conversation then turns to innovation and digital assets. Vinay shares how SGX has embraced blockchain initiatives, collaborated on tokenization projects, and launched institutional crypto derivatives to bridge the gap between traditional finance and digital asset markets. We explore how exchanges can adapt to emerging technologies while maintaining the infrastructure, governance, and trust expected by institutional participants.
We also discuss the relationship between SGX and the retail trading ecosystem. Vinay outlines the exchange's efforts to support broker growth through education, technology, and liquidity solutions, while highlighting the importance of retail participation in building vibrant and sustainable capital markets.
Finally, we look ahead to the second half of the year and the challenges facing market participants in an increasingly volatile environment. From geopolitical uncertainty and commodity price swings to shifting macroeconomic trends, Vinay explains why the industry's focus must remain on providing resilient infrastructure, deep liquidity, and efficient risk management tools for every segment of the market.
Here is our conversation with Vinay Trivedi, CEO of SGX CurrencyNode, on Singapore's growing role in global FX markets, exchange innovation, and the future of institutional liquidity.
We begin with Singapore's rise as one of the world's leading foreign exchange centers and discuss the role SGX plays in an ecosystem traditionally dominated by OTC trading. Vinay explains how SGX has expanded its footprint across exchange-traded and OTC markets, building a comprehensive suite of solutions spanning execution, distribution, risk management, market data, and liquidity provision.
The conversation then turns to innovation and digital assets. Vinay shares how SGX has embraced blockchain initiatives, collaborated on tokenization projects, and launched institutional crypto derivatives to bridge the gap between traditional finance and digital asset markets. We explore how exchanges can adapt to emerging technologies while maintaining the infrastructure, governance, and trust expected by institutional participants.
We also discuss the relationship between SGX and the retail trading ecosystem. Vinay outlines the exchange's efforts to support broker growth through education, technology, and liquidity solutions, while highlighting the importance of retail participation in building vibrant and sustainable capital markets.
Finally, we look ahead to the second half of the year and the challenges facing market participants in an increasingly volatile environment. From geopolitical uncertainty and commodity price swings to shifting macroeconomic trends, Vinay explains why the industry's focus must remain on providing resilient infrastructure, deep liquidity, and efficient risk management tools for every segment of the market.
Here is our conversation with Vinay Trivedi, CEO of SGX CurrencyNode, on Singapore's growing role in global FX markets, exchange innovation, and the future of institutional liquidity.
We begin with Singapore's rise as one of the world's leading foreign exchange centers and discuss the role SGX plays in an ecosystem traditionally dominated by OTC trading. Vinay explains how SGX has expanded its footprint across exchange-traded and OTC markets, building a comprehensive suite of solutions spanning execution, distribution, risk management, market data, and liquidity provision.
The conversation then turns to innovation and digital assets. Vinay shares how SGX has embraced blockchain initiatives, collaborated on tokenization projects, and launched institutional crypto derivatives to bridge the gap between traditional finance and digital asset markets. We explore how exchanges can adapt to emerging technologies while maintaining the infrastructure, governance, and trust expected by institutional participants.
We also discuss the relationship between SGX and the retail trading ecosystem. Vinay outlines the exchange's efforts to support broker growth through education, technology, and liquidity solutions, while highlighting the importance of retail participation in building vibrant and sustainable capital markets.
Finally, we look ahead to the second half of the year and the challenges facing market participants in an increasingly volatile environment. From geopolitical uncertainty and commodity price swings to shifting macroeconomic trends, Vinay explains why the industry's focus must remain on providing resilient infrastructure, deep liquidity, and efficient risk management tools for every segment of the market.
Industry Talks | Philip Huang | CRO, Orient Futures Singapore | FM Singapore Summit 2026
Industry Talks | Philip Huang | CRO, Orient Futures Singapore | FM Singapore Summit 2026
Industry Talks | Philip Huang | CRO, Orient Futures Singapore | FM Singapore Summit 2026
Industry Talks | Philip Huang | CRO, Orient Futures Singapore | FM Singapore Summit 2026
Industry Talks | Philip Huang | CRO, Orient Futures Singapore | FM Singapore Summit 2026
Industry Talks | Philip Huang | CRO, Orient Futures Singapore | FM Singapore Summit 2026
Here is our conversation with Philip Huang, Chief Risk Officer at Orient Futures Singapore, on navigating market volatility, modern risk management, and Singapore's growing role as a global liquidity hub.
We begin by reflecting on the heightened volatility seen across commodities and energy markets in recent months. Philip shares how risk frameworks were stress-tested during periods of geopolitical uncertainty, why correlations breaking down is one of the toughest challenges for risk teams, and what stood out most to him was the composure and preparedness displayed by market participants throughout the turbulence.
The discussion then turns to the evolving nature of risk management. Drawing on insights from a private industry roundtable, Philip explains why successful risk functions increasingly require a combination of quantitative expertise, technological understanding, and strong governance. We explore the growing role of AI, automation, and human oversight, and why effective risk management is becoming a multidisciplinary discipline rather than a collection of isolated specializations.
We also examine Singapore's position in the global liquidity landscape. Philip discusses how the city-state has developed a distinct identity compared to other major financial centers, driven by institutional participation, regulatory stability, and a market structure that continues to attract sophisticated participants from across the region.
Finally, we look ahead to the second half of the year and the challenges risk teams are preparing for. Philip shares how simulation exercises, stress-testing programs, and forward-looking risk indicators are becoming increasingly important as firms adapt to an environment where volatility remains the norm and resilience is a competitive advantage.
Here is our conversation with Philip Huang, Chief Risk Officer at Orient Futures Singapore, on navigating market volatility, modern risk management, and Singapore's growing role as a global liquidity hub.
We begin by reflecting on the heightened volatility seen across commodities and energy markets in recent months. Philip shares how risk frameworks were stress-tested during periods of geopolitical uncertainty, why correlations breaking down is one of the toughest challenges for risk teams, and what stood out most to him was the composure and preparedness displayed by market participants throughout the turbulence.
The discussion then turns to the evolving nature of risk management. Drawing on insights from a private industry roundtable, Philip explains why successful risk functions increasingly require a combination of quantitative expertise, technological understanding, and strong governance. We explore the growing role of AI, automation, and human oversight, and why effective risk management is becoming a multidisciplinary discipline rather than a collection of isolated specializations.
We also examine Singapore's position in the global liquidity landscape. Philip discusses how the city-state has developed a distinct identity compared to other major financial centers, driven by institutional participation, regulatory stability, and a market structure that continues to attract sophisticated participants from across the region.
Finally, we look ahead to the second half of the year and the challenges risk teams are preparing for. Philip shares how simulation exercises, stress-testing programs, and forward-looking risk indicators are becoming increasingly important as firms adapt to an environment where volatility remains the norm and resilience is a competitive advantage.
Here is our conversation with Philip Huang, Chief Risk Officer at Orient Futures Singapore, on navigating market volatility, modern risk management, and Singapore's growing role as a global liquidity hub.
We begin by reflecting on the heightened volatility seen across commodities and energy markets in recent months. Philip shares how risk frameworks were stress-tested during periods of geopolitical uncertainty, why correlations breaking down is one of the toughest challenges for risk teams, and what stood out most to him was the composure and preparedness displayed by market participants throughout the turbulence.
The discussion then turns to the evolving nature of risk management. Drawing on insights from a private industry roundtable, Philip explains why successful risk functions increasingly require a combination of quantitative expertise, technological understanding, and strong governance. We explore the growing role of AI, automation, and human oversight, and why effective risk management is becoming a multidisciplinary discipline rather than a collection of isolated specializations.
We also examine Singapore's position in the global liquidity landscape. Philip discusses how the city-state has developed a distinct identity compared to other major financial centers, driven by institutional participation, regulatory stability, and a market structure that continues to attract sophisticated participants from across the region.
Finally, we look ahead to the second half of the year and the challenges risk teams are preparing for. Philip shares how simulation exercises, stress-testing programs, and forward-looking risk indicators are becoming increasingly important as firms adapt to an environment where volatility remains the norm and resilience is a competitive advantage.
Here is our conversation with Philip Huang, Chief Risk Officer at Orient Futures Singapore, on navigating market volatility, modern risk management, and Singapore's growing role as a global liquidity hub.
We begin by reflecting on the heightened volatility seen across commodities and energy markets in recent months. Philip shares how risk frameworks were stress-tested during periods of geopolitical uncertainty, why correlations breaking down is one of the toughest challenges for risk teams, and what stood out most to him was the composure and preparedness displayed by market participants throughout the turbulence.
The discussion then turns to the evolving nature of risk management. Drawing on insights from a private industry roundtable, Philip explains why successful risk functions increasingly require a combination of quantitative expertise, technological understanding, and strong governance. We explore the growing role of AI, automation, and human oversight, and why effective risk management is becoming a multidisciplinary discipline rather than a collection of isolated specializations.
We also examine Singapore's position in the global liquidity landscape. Philip discusses how the city-state has developed a distinct identity compared to other major financial centers, driven by institutional participation, regulatory stability, and a market structure that continues to attract sophisticated participants from across the region.
Finally, we look ahead to the second half of the year and the challenges risk teams are preparing for. Philip shares how simulation exercises, stress-testing programs, and forward-looking risk indicators are becoming increasingly important as firms adapt to an environment where volatility remains the norm and resilience is a competitive advantage.
Here is our conversation with Philip Huang, Chief Risk Officer at Orient Futures Singapore, on navigating market volatility, modern risk management, and Singapore's growing role as a global liquidity hub.
We begin by reflecting on the heightened volatility seen across commodities and energy markets in recent months. Philip shares how risk frameworks were stress-tested during periods of geopolitical uncertainty, why correlations breaking down is one of the toughest challenges for risk teams, and what stood out most to him was the composure and preparedness displayed by market participants throughout the turbulence.
The discussion then turns to the evolving nature of risk management. Drawing on insights from a private industry roundtable, Philip explains why successful risk functions increasingly require a combination of quantitative expertise, technological understanding, and strong governance. We explore the growing role of AI, automation, and human oversight, and why effective risk management is becoming a multidisciplinary discipline rather than a collection of isolated specializations.
We also examine Singapore's position in the global liquidity landscape. Philip discusses how the city-state has developed a distinct identity compared to other major financial centers, driven by institutional participation, regulatory stability, and a market structure that continues to attract sophisticated participants from across the region.
Finally, we look ahead to the second half of the year and the challenges risk teams are preparing for. Philip shares how simulation exercises, stress-testing programs, and forward-looking risk indicators are becoming increasingly important as firms adapt to an environment where volatility remains the norm and resilience is a competitive advantage.
Here is our conversation with Philip Huang, Chief Risk Officer at Orient Futures Singapore, on navigating market volatility, modern risk management, and Singapore's growing role as a global liquidity hub.
We begin by reflecting on the heightened volatility seen across commodities and energy markets in recent months. Philip shares how risk frameworks were stress-tested during periods of geopolitical uncertainty, why correlations breaking down is one of the toughest challenges for risk teams, and what stood out most to him was the composure and preparedness displayed by market participants throughout the turbulence.
The discussion then turns to the evolving nature of risk management. Drawing on insights from a private industry roundtable, Philip explains why successful risk functions increasingly require a combination of quantitative expertise, technological understanding, and strong governance. We explore the growing role of AI, automation, and human oversight, and why effective risk management is becoming a multidisciplinary discipline rather than a collection of isolated specializations.
We also examine Singapore's position in the global liquidity landscape. Philip discusses how the city-state has developed a distinct identity compared to other major financial centers, driven by institutional participation, regulatory stability, and a market structure that continues to attract sophisticated participants from across the region.
Finally, we look ahead to the second half of the year and the challenges risk teams are preparing for. Philip shares how simulation exercises, stress-testing programs, and forward-looking risk indicators are becoming increasingly important as firms adapt to an environment where volatility remains the norm and resilience is a competitive advantage.
Industry Talks | Vidushan Premathiratne | Founder, 8 Circle & TechLabs | FM Singapore Summit 2026
Industry Talks | Vidushan Premathiratne | Founder, 8 Circle & TechLabs | FM Singapore Summit 2026
Industry Talks | Vidushan Premathiratne | Founder, 8 Circle & TechLabs | FM Singapore Summit 2026
Industry Talks | Vidushan Premathiratne | Founder, 8 Circle & TechLabs | FM Singapore Summit 2026
Industry Talks | Vidushan Premathiratne | Founder, 8 Circle & TechLabs | FM Singapore Summit 2026
Industry Talks | Vidushan Premathiratne | Founder, 8 Circle & TechLabs | FM Singapore Summit 2026
Here is our conversation with Vidushan Premathiratne, Founder of 8 Circle and TechLabs, on startup growth, business development, AI opportunities, and the evolving digital asset ecosystem.
We begin with Vidushan's work across both ventures, from participating in the Bank of England's digital securities and digital pound initiatives through TechLabs to helping businesses accelerate growth through curated introductions, investor connections, and strategic networking with Eight Circle.
The discussion then turns to one of the most persistent challenges facing startups: go-to-market execution. Vidushan explains why customer acquisition remains harder than product development in the AI era, how founders can better identify decision-makers within target organizations, and why face-to-face interactions continue to outperform digital channels when it comes to building trust and closing deals.
We also explore the opportunities emerging from AI and agentic workflows. Vidushan shares his perspective on where startups can still create meaningful value, from workflow automation and digital transformation to AI-powered research, customer acquisition, and localized solutions tailored to specific markets across Asia.
Finally, we discuss stablecoins and digital asset adoption in the region. Vidushan outlines why cross-border payments and remittances remain one of the strongest use cases for stablecoin infrastructure, how regulatory and compliance challenges are being addressed, and why Singapore continues to position itself as a leading hub for innovation at the intersection of finance and technology.
Here is our conversation with Vidushan Premathiratne, Founder of 8 Circle and TechLabs, on startup growth, business development, AI opportunities, and the evolving digital asset ecosystem.
We begin with Vidushan's work across both ventures, from participating in the Bank of England's digital securities and digital pound initiatives through TechLabs to helping businesses accelerate growth through curated introductions, investor connections, and strategic networking with Eight Circle.
The discussion then turns to one of the most persistent challenges facing startups: go-to-market execution. Vidushan explains why customer acquisition remains harder than product development in the AI era, how founders can better identify decision-makers within target organizations, and why face-to-face interactions continue to outperform digital channels when it comes to building trust and closing deals.
We also explore the opportunities emerging from AI and agentic workflows. Vidushan shares his perspective on where startups can still create meaningful value, from workflow automation and digital transformation to AI-powered research, customer acquisition, and localized solutions tailored to specific markets across Asia.
Finally, we discuss stablecoins and digital asset adoption in the region. Vidushan outlines why cross-border payments and remittances remain one of the strongest use cases for stablecoin infrastructure, how regulatory and compliance challenges are being addressed, and why Singapore continues to position itself as a leading hub for innovation at the intersection of finance and technology.
Here is our conversation with Vidushan Premathiratne, Founder of 8 Circle and TechLabs, on startup growth, business development, AI opportunities, and the evolving digital asset ecosystem.
We begin with Vidushan's work across both ventures, from participating in the Bank of England's digital securities and digital pound initiatives through TechLabs to helping businesses accelerate growth through curated introductions, investor connections, and strategic networking with Eight Circle.
The discussion then turns to one of the most persistent challenges facing startups: go-to-market execution. Vidushan explains why customer acquisition remains harder than product development in the AI era, how founders can better identify decision-makers within target organizations, and why face-to-face interactions continue to outperform digital channels when it comes to building trust and closing deals.
We also explore the opportunities emerging from AI and agentic workflows. Vidushan shares his perspective on where startups can still create meaningful value, from workflow automation and digital transformation to AI-powered research, customer acquisition, and localized solutions tailored to specific markets across Asia.
Finally, we discuss stablecoins and digital asset adoption in the region. Vidushan outlines why cross-border payments and remittances remain one of the strongest use cases for stablecoin infrastructure, how regulatory and compliance challenges are being addressed, and why Singapore continues to position itself as a leading hub for innovation at the intersection of finance and technology.
Here is our conversation with Vidushan Premathiratne, Founder of 8 Circle and TechLabs, on startup growth, business development, AI opportunities, and the evolving digital asset ecosystem.
We begin with Vidushan's work across both ventures, from participating in the Bank of England's digital securities and digital pound initiatives through TechLabs to helping businesses accelerate growth through curated introductions, investor connections, and strategic networking with Eight Circle.
The discussion then turns to one of the most persistent challenges facing startups: go-to-market execution. Vidushan explains why customer acquisition remains harder than product development in the AI era, how founders can better identify decision-makers within target organizations, and why face-to-face interactions continue to outperform digital channels when it comes to building trust and closing deals.
We also explore the opportunities emerging from AI and agentic workflows. Vidushan shares his perspective on where startups can still create meaningful value, from workflow automation and digital transformation to AI-powered research, customer acquisition, and localized solutions tailored to specific markets across Asia.
Finally, we discuss stablecoins and digital asset adoption in the region. Vidushan outlines why cross-border payments and remittances remain one of the strongest use cases for stablecoin infrastructure, how regulatory and compliance challenges are being addressed, and why Singapore continues to position itself as a leading hub for innovation at the intersection of finance and technology.
Here is our conversation with Vidushan Premathiratne, Founder of 8 Circle and TechLabs, on startup growth, business development, AI opportunities, and the evolving digital asset ecosystem.
We begin with Vidushan's work across both ventures, from participating in the Bank of England's digital securities and digital pound initiatives through TechLabs to helping businesses accelerate growth through curated introductions, investor connections, and strategic networking with Eight Circle.
The discussion then turns to one of the most persistent challenges facing startups: go-to-market execution. Vidushan explains why customer acquisition remains harder than product development in the AI era, how founders can better identify decision-makers within target organizations, and why face-to-face interactions continue to outperform digital channels when it comes to building trust and closing deals.
We also explore the opportunities emerging from AI and agentic workflows. Vidushan shares his perspective on where startups can still create meaningful value, from workflow automation and digital transformation to AI-powered research, customer acquisition, and localized solutions tailored to specific markets across Asia.
Finally, we discuss stablecoins and digital asset adoption in the region. Vidushan outlines why cross-border payments and remittances remain one of the strongest use cases for stablecoin infrastructure, how regulatory and compliance challenges are being addressed, and why Singapore continues to position itself as a leading hub for innovation at the intersection of finance and technology.
Here is our conversation with Vidushan Premathiratne, Founder of 8 Circle and TechLabs, on startup growth, business development, AI opportunities, and the evolving digital asset ecosystem.
We begin with Vidushan's work across both ventures, from participating in the Bank of England's digital securities and digital pound initiatives through TechLabs to helping businesses accelerate growth through curated introductions, investor connections, and strategic networking with Eight Circle.
The discussion then turns to one of the most persistent challenges facing startups: go-to-market execution. Vidushan explains why customer acquisition remains harder than product development in the AI era, how founders can better identify decision-makers within target organizations, and why face-to-face interactions continue to outperform digital channels when it comes to building trust and closing deals.
We also explore the opportunities emerging from AI and agentic workflows. Vidushan shares his perspective on where startups can still create meaningful value, from workflow automation and digital transformation to AI-powered research, customer acquisition, and localized solutions tailored to specific markets across Asia.
Finally, we discuss stablecoins and digital asset adoption in the region. Vidushan outlines why cross-border payments and remittances remain one of the strongest use cases for stablecoin infrastructure, how regulatory and compliance challenges are being addressed, and why Singapore continues to position itself as a leading hub for innovation at the intersection of finance and technology.
Industry Talks | Luke Boland | Head of Fintech Coverage, Standard Chartered | FM Singapore Summit 26
Industry Talks | Luke Boland | Head of Fintech Coverage, Standard Chartered | FM Singapore Summit 26
Industry Talks | Luke Boland | Head of Fintech Coverage, Standard Chartered | FM Singapore Summit 26
Industry Talks | Luke Boland | Head of Fintech Coverage, Standard Chartered | FM Singapore Summit 26
Industry Talks | Luke Boland | Head of Fintech Coverage, Standard Chartered | FM Singapore Summit 26
Industry Talks | Luke Boland | Head of Fintech Coverage, Standard Chartered | FM Singapore Summit 26
Here is our conversation with Luke Boland, Global Head of Fintech Coverage at Standard Chartered, on the evolving relationship between traditional banking and digital assets.
We begin by discussing how banks' attitudes toward crypto and digital assets have changed over the past few years. Luke explains Standard Chartered's journey from banking the ecosystem to actively building infrastructure across key markets, and how the bank sees itself as a bridge between traditional finance and the crypto-native world.
The conversation then explores the challenges and opportunities facing banks as digital asset adoption accelerates. Luke shares why stablecoins have emerged as one of the most compelling use cases, how client demand continues to shape the bank's strategy, and what lessons the wider banking sector can learn from the rapid evolution of blockchain-based financial services.
We also dive into real-world applications beyond the hype cycle, including digital asset custody, collateral management, and partnerships between global financial institutions and crypto exchanges. Luke discusses how Standard Chartered is helping institutional clients access digital asset markets while maintaining the security, governance, and trust expected from a global bank.
Finally, we look ahead to the next phase of financial innovation, with a focus on stablecoins, on-chain financial infrastructure, and the future of payments. Luke shares insights into Standard Chartered's recent Hong Kong stablecoin initiative and explains why the bank believes that a growing share of financial services will ultimately move on-chain.
Here is our conversation with Luke Boland, Global Head of Fintech Coverage at Standard Chartered, on the evolving relationship between traditional banking and digital assets.
We begin by discussing how banks' attitudes toward crypto and digital assets have changed over the past few years. Luke explains Standard Chartered's journey from banking the ecosystem to actively building infrastructure across key markets, and how the bank sees itself as a bridge between traditional finance and the crypto-native world.
The conversation then explores the challenges and opportunities facing banks as digital asset adoption accelerates. Luke shares why stablecoins have emerged as one of the most compelling use cases, how client demand continues to shape the bank's strategy, and what lessons the wider banking sector can learn from the rapid evolution of blockchain-based financial services.
We also dive into real-world applications beyond the hype cycle, including digital asset custody, collateral management, and partnerships between global financial institutions and crypto exchanges. Luke discusses how Standard Chartered is helping institutional clients access digital asset markets while maintaining the security, governance, and trust expected from a global bank.
Finally, we look ahead to the next phase of financial innovation, with a focus on stablecoins, on-chain financial infrastructure, and the future of payments. Luke shares insights into Standard Chartered's recent Hong Kong stablecoin initiative and explains why the bank believes that a growing share of financial services will ultimately move on-chain.
Here is our conversation with Luke Boland, Global Head of Fintech Coverage at Standard Chartered, on the evolving relationship between traditional banking and digital assets.
We begin by discussing how banks' attitudes toward crypto and digital assets have changed over the past few years. Luke explains Standard Chartered's journey from banking the ecosystem to actively building infrastructure across key markets, and how the bank sees itself as a bridge between traditional finance and the crypto-native world.
The conversation then explores the challenges and opportunities facing banks as digital asset adoption accelerates. Luke shares why stablecoins have emerged as one of the most compelling use cases, how client demand continues to shape the bank's strategy, and what lessons the wider banking sector can learn from the rapid evolution of blockchain-based financial services.
We also dive into real-world applications beyond the hype cycle, including digital asset custody, collateral management, and partnerships between global financial institutions and crypto exchanges. Luke discusses how Standard Chartered is helping institutional clients access digital asset markets while maintaining the security, governance, and trust expected from a global bank.
Finally, we look ahead to the next phase of financial innovation, with a focus on stablecoins, on-chain financial infrastructure, and the future of payments. Luke shares insights into Standard Chartered's recent Hong Kong stablecoin initiative and explains why the bank believes that a growing share of financial services will ultimately move on-chain.
Here is our conversation with Luke Boland, Global Head of Fintech Coverage at Standard Chartered, on the evolving relationship between traditional banking and digital assets.
We begin by discussing how banks' attitudes toward crypto and digital assets have changed over the past few years. Luke explains Standard Chartered's journey from banking the ecosystem to actively building infrastructure across key markets, and how the bank sees itself as a bridge between traditional finance and the crypto-native world.
The conversation then explores the challenges and opportunities facing banks as digital asset adoption accelerates. Luke shares why stablecoins have emerged as one of the most compelling use cases, how client demand continues to shape the bank's strategy, and what lessons the wider banking sector can learn from the rapid evolution of blockchain-based financial services.
We also dive into real-world applications beyond the hype cycle, including digital asset custody, collateral management, and partnerships between global financial institutions and crypto exchanges. Luke discusses how Standard Chartered is helping institutional clients access digital asset markets while maintaining the security, governance, and trust expected from a global bank.
Finally, we look ahead to the next phase of financial innovation, with a focus on stablecoins, on-chain financial infrastructure, and the future of payments. Luke shares insights into Standard Chartered's recent Hong Kong stablecoin initiative and explains why the bank believes that a growing share of financial services will ultimately move on-chain.
Here is our conversation with Luke Boland, Global Head of Fintech Coverage at Standard Chartered, on the evolving relationship between traditional banking and digital assets.
We begin by discussing how banks' attitudes toward crypto and digital assets have changed over the past few years. Luke explains Standard Chartered's journey from banking the ecosystem to actively building infrastructure across key markets, and how the bank sees itself as a bridge between traditional finance and the crypto-native world.
The conversation then explores the challenges and opportunities facing banks as digital asset adoption accelerates. Luke shares why stablecoins have emerged as one of the most compelling use cases, how client demand continues to shape the bank's strategy, and what lessons the wider banking sector can learn from the rapid evolution of blockchain-based financial services.
We also dive into real-world applications beyond the hype cycle, including digital asset custody, collateral management, and partnerships between global financial institutions and crypto exchanges. Luke discusses how Standard Chartered is helping institutional clients access digital asset markets while maintaining the security, governance, and trust expected from a global bank.
Finally, we look ahead to the next phase of financial innovation, with a focus on stablecoins, on-chain financial infrastructure, and the future of payments. Luke shares insights into Standard Chartered's recent Hong Kong stablecoin initiative and explains why the bank believes that a growing share of financial services will ultimately move on-chain.
Here is our conversation with Luke Boland, Global Head of Fintech Coverage at Standard Chartered, on the evolving relationship between traditional banking and digital assets.
We begin by discussing how banks' attitudes toward crypto and digital assets have changed over the past few years. Luke explains Standard Chartered's journey from banking the ecosystem to actively building infrastructure across key markets, and how the bank sees itself as a bridge between traditional finance and the crypto-native world.
The conversation then explores the challenges and opportunities facing banks as digital asset adoption accelerates. Luke shares why stablecoins have emerged as one of the most compelling use cases, how client demand continues to shape the bank's strategy, and what lessons the wider banking sector can learn from the rapid evolution of blockchain-based financial services.
We also dive into real-world applications beyond the hype cycle, including digital asset custody, collateral management, and partnerships between global financial institutions and crypto exchanges. Luke discusses how Standard Chartered is helping institutional clients access digital asset markets while maintaining the security, governance, and trust expected from a global bank.
Finally, we look ahead to the next phase of financial innovation, with a focus on stablecoins, on-chain financial infrastructure, and the future of payments. Luke shares insights into Standard Chartered's recent Hong Kong stablecoin initiative and explains why the bank believes that a growing share of financial services will ultimately move on-chain.