The Digital Financial Architecture in Transition: AI, Digital Currencies, Infrastructure, and Trust
Each year, the Digital Finance Day brings pressing questions around technology, innovation, and regulation in Swiss banking into the spotlight. The accompanying blog series has explored these discussions in greater depth, provided context, and carried them forward. A concluding conversation to close the blog series.
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Richard, the Digital Finance Day blog series addressed key technological and strategic questions surrounding digitalization in banking. From your perspective, what is the key takeaway from the contributions?
From my point of view, the key insight is that we are no longer dealing with isolated technological trends. The contributions make one thing very clear: topics such as stablecoins, artificial intelligence in the form of autonomous agents, fraud prevention, payments, and digital banking more broadly are not separate domains, but components of a shared system. They interlock like gears, and when one of them accelerates, it inevitably affects the others.
The blog series helped to deepen individual developments, put them into context, and more clearly articulate the interplay between innovation, risk, and responsibility.
Stablecoins were one of the defining topics of the series. How would you summarize the current state of the debate?
The discussion has reached a clear level of maturity. Today, the focus is less on the fundamental existence of digital currencies such as stablecoins and more on their concrete design and integration into the existing financial system. The experimental phase is increasingly giving way to the question of how these new building blocks can be sustainably embedded into the foundation of the financial system.
…and where do you see the biggest hurdles in this transition to practice?
Key issues here include monetary policy, financial stability, payments, and technological and strategic sovereignty. The contributions clearly show that digital currencies can enable efficiency gains and unlock new use cases, for example in cross-border payments or programmable payments. At the same time, a sound regulatory classification is essential to ensure that acceleration does not turn into a loss of control.
Another major focus of the blog series was artificial intelligence. Why is this topic so central for banks?
With agentic AI, we are currently experiencing a qualitative leap. AI is no longer just an analytical or assistive tool, but is increasingly becoming an active participant in core banking processes. Today, systems are capable of acting autonomously, steering workflows, and preparing decisions.
This opens up enormous potential for efficiency, scalability, and new business models – but at the same time presents banks with new challenges in terms of governance, accountability, and control. Especially in a banking context, models are crucial in which human expertise and AI do not compete, but complement each other sensibly, like pilot and autopilot.
What role does AI play in the context of fraud prevention – especially in an era of increasingly AI-enabled fraud schemes?
A central role. AI is now both part of the solution and part of the challenge. On the one hand, it enables banks to identify fraud patterns more quickly, assess risks more precisely, and target preventive measures more effectively. On the other hand, fraudsters are also using AI to scale attacks, personalize schemes, and better conceal their tracks.
This underscores that fraud prevention in the age of AI is not an arms race between individual players, but requires a holistic approach. This includes continuous awareness-raising among customers, effective technological solutions, and above all cross-industry collaboration along the entire fraud chain. Only when information flows and interfaces work can an effective protection network emerge.
What role do associations play in this context – and specifically the Swiss Bankers Association (SBA)?
Associations assume a central bridging and coordination role here. The SBA does not see itself as a driver of individual technologies, but as a platform for dialogue and positioning: a place where different perspectives are brought together, orientation is provided, and concrete recommendations for next steps are developed.
To conclude: where do we stand in the debate around digital transformation in banking?
Clearly: right in the middle of it. The developments outlined are not short-term trends, but structural changes with long-term impact. They are transforming not only individual processes, but the architecture of the financial system as a whole.
It is therefore crucial to continue the dialogue openly and based on facts. In the coming months, further important platforms will provide opportunities to do so, and I strongly encourage active participation. These forums enable exchange, networking, and shared learning. Because the future of digital financial architecture requires dialogue, not going it alone.