Fellow, Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance, Cambridge Judge Business School
Keith is a Fellow at the Centre for Alternative Finance, part of the Judge Business School at the University of Cambridge. He is focused on research and industry collaboration in Digital Assets and Fintech innovation. He chairs the Cambridge Digital Asset Research programme, supported by 14 global institutions, and teaches on the Cambridge Digital Assets course for Regulators.
Previously, Keith was responsible globally for the strategy, development and execution of IBM’s business in Financial Markets, working extensively with global clients on major transformation programmes.
Keith serves on the Advisory Board of 5 Fintechs, as a Board Member at DFNS (a Web3 wallet infrastructure provider), as a lead mentor at the Techstars ABN Amro and Web3 accelerators, as a member of the Technology and Operational Resilience Committee at the LME, as a member of WEF’s Expert Council, and also sits on the BoE’s CBDC Technology Forum.
Roundtable Room 2 (Level 2)
Open
The case for tokenization varies across asset classes and jurisdictions. The calculus – and speed of adoption of technology - is likely to be different for existing financial centres, tied to traditional financial market infrastructure and where incumbents have significant sway and large parts of the population have access to digital money and financial services, and emerging economies, which can leapfrog. Despite that, the public discussion and the discussion in global fora is heavily shaped by the experience of AEs. This roundtable would aim to address that gap, identifying use cases prevalent in Emerging Market and Developing Economies_ (_EMDEs) and fostering an exchange about options to regulate tokenization. It would be complementary to the work IOSCO has done so far, and supportive of the current workstream on tokenization.
This roundtable will bring together market participants and regulators from select EDME jurisdictions to discuss:
a. Specific use cases for tokenisation in EMDEs
b. Key regulatory and policy considerations, including barriers to tokenisation
c. Regulatory innovation initiatives and challenges of moving from experimentation to regulatory reform