"It makes sense for us to lead with custody," says Butler. "We see it as foundational - execution is next. Clients come to us for trust, innovation, and client experience. Interoperability is key."
"We've started a bit later than some but we hope to bring a full solution to market next year," says Chakar. "#Tokenisation is where 80% of our efforts are going. We're tokenising collateral for settlement. We want to 'melt the middle office away'. Elephants can dance."
"Our clients don't care that they're *digital* assets, they just want access to assets," says Chapman. "Crypto is the big use case. The rest is experimentation, but that will change over the next 12-24 months."
"We taking existing assets in the CSD and digitising them natively," says Riley. "We need to make sure there is some kind of trade in what we're doing, such as demand or efficiency."
"We need harmonised regulations that will level the playing field," says Butler. "Institutional investors are waiting to get in - but they need the safety guard rails.
"You open up these technologies to people and you don't know what they're going to do with them," says Herkelrath. "Multiple concerts this summer were carried out as NFTs. You got more of an experience and you have a collectable. That's fascinating for the future."
Live on the #Sibos stage: @JanineJoyHirt introducing Alistair Currie, Global Head of Consumer Banking & Payments, @Barclays.
"Innovation is no longer a department," says Currie. "It's part of our fabric. But we've figured out we can't do it all ourselves. We've grown more accustomed to working with partners and running an open architecture model [to innovate]."
"We look for partners of all shapes and sizes," says Currie. "We won't always use partners but we certainly look. We're looking for that bit of competitive edge."
This morning, we're bringing you highlights from @joymacknight's Inside Leadership interview with @BankofAmerica's Vice Chair, Cathy Bessant.
"There are 1.5m jobs in cyber alone that are unfilled today," says Bessant. "Our job is to train people for the skills we need today and in the future. Technology can be learned. We don't need more workers, we need the right skills."
"No one in this room is ready to transact when there is no one to contact if things go wrong," says Rieupeyroux. "What you want, at the very least, is someone you can sue if things go wrong."
"When you look at smart contracts, you can easily imagine an environment where someone you trust is certifying the smart contract," says Rieupeyroux. "There are many areas where centralised players can deliver value in a decentralised environment."
"Millions of small merchants are now taking payments from phones in their pockets," says HM Queen Maxima. "But we should not seek innovation for innovation's sake. The first priority is 'do no harm', ensure cybersecurity and data governance are in place."
"But we have a chance to move beyond that to 'doing good'," says HM Queen Máxima. "It is important to see how much value for customers and value for firms we can generate in the long term. How can we do more of this?"