Charles Kudelski is a founder and global entrepreneur bridging finance, technology, and real-world assets. Leading Kudelski & Partners.
The next revolution in finance won’t come with flashing headlines or trading hype. It’s happening quietly, deep in the infrastructure of global payments.
Most people tapping a card or sending a wire will never see it, but the shift is underway. Traditional and delayed batch-based settlements are giving way to continuous, programmable money, reshaping the backbone of the financial system.
Regulatory Clarity And The Future Of Digital Money
Over the past 18 months, three developments have quietly converged. In Europe, the MiCA framework formally brought digital assets into regulated finance, forcing banks and issuers to adapt rather than debate. In the United States, the GENIUS Act did the same for dollar-denominated stablecoins, putting them under federal supervision with full-reserve and disclosure requirements. And perhaps most quietly of all, SWIFT, the interbank utility that links more than 11,000 institutions, announced plans to integrate a blockchain-based ledger to support real-time, cross-border settlement.
Regulators created clarity, utilities modernized and builders took note. Y Combinator, together with Coinbase, called stablecoins the first real success story of Fintech 3.0 and invited founders to build around them with their latest request for builders. This alignment of policy, plumbing and talent marks a structural moment: Money itself is becoming software, and the system is quietly catching up.
What does that mean in practice? Stablecoins are simply digital representations of traditional currencies that move at internet speed. Behind that simplicity sits a profound shift. Instead of multi-day correspondent chains and reconciliation layers, settlement now happens in seconds, at any hour, with transparent reserves and programmable logic for escrow or conditional release.
For treasurers and CFOs, that means working capital that turns faster, fewer exceptions to chase and liquidity that no longer sleeps on weekends.
Preparing Finance For 24/7 Money
Banks and corporates will likely adopt this not as a branding exercise but as a cost-reduction one. Shared ledgers cut reconciliation overhead. Smart contracts eliminate manual sequencing. A dollar transferred on a regulated blockchain behaves like any other dollar, only faster, cheaper and trackable end-to-end. The consumer will never notice; the balance just moves. But the institutions behind the scenes could save billions in latency, error correction and trapped cash.
Still, technology alone won’t make this transformation successful. Financial leaders need to prepare governance, risk and accounting frameworks for a world of 24/7 money. That means rewriting treasury policies for continuous flows; designing payment stacks that can route across multiple rails, cards, wires or on-chain; and setting up audit trails that combine traditional statements with on-chain attestations. The firms that do this early can enjoy not just efficiency, but resilience.
The parallels to the early internet are obvious. The infrastructure was built long before the mass applications appeared. Today, stablecoins and tokenized cash are doing the same for value transfer. Regulation has legitimized them, infrastructure is integrating them and entrepreneurs are building around them.
Challenges And Considerations
While the transformation to digital, programmable money offers significant benefits, organizations must carefully navigate several risks and challenges to ensure successful adoption.
Cybersecurity tops the list. Managing private keys demands new skills, whether done in-house or delegated to custodians. That decision is critical: Mismanagement here can mean permanent loss of funds. As firms adopt multi-rail payment systems, they’ll need experts to manage flows and reliable partners to secure assets.
Stablecoins also pose risks around reserve transparency and liquidity. Only fully backed, transparent reserves can maintain trust. Under stress, liquidity strains can surface, shaking stability. Regulatory uncertainty also lingers, especially across borders, complicating compliance and adoption. Diligence on issuer credibility, reserve backing and regulatory environments is compulsory.
Addressing these risks requires tough governance decisions, ongoing risk management and smart technology investments. Firms that do this can turn potential pitfalls into advantages, embracing the efficiencies of 24/7 programmable money while safeguarding their operations and reputation.
3 Steps To Future-Proof Your Payment Systems
Financial executives who still file this under “crypto” risk missing the point. This isn’t a speculative experiment—it’s the quiet modernization of money’s infrastructure already underway and expanding by the quarter.
To stay ahead of it, here are a few steps for firms to take:
1. Pilot real flows, not proofs of concept. Run a live, low-risk cross-border payment or treasury transfer using a regulated, fiat-backed stablecoin. Track the improvement in speed, cost and working capital release. Seeing the data will move this conversation from theory to balance sheet.
2. Build optionality into your payment architecture. Design systems that can route value across cards, wires or on-chain rails automatically based on cost, geography and counterparty. Multi-rail capability will soon be table stakes, not innovation.
3. Modernize governance for continuous liquidity. Treasury, risk and audit functions must adapt to 24/7 money, verifying reserves, managing keys and closing books in real time. The firms that master this first set the new operational benchmark.
The New Payment Reality
For consumers, nothing will appear to change. But for the institutions running the world’s payment pipes, this is one of the most significant rebuilds since the birth of electronic banking. The future of finance won’t announce itself with noise; it will arrive quietly, through systems that simply work, faster, cheaper and always on.
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