Pat Patel is the business CEO driving GFTN’s growth in the USA, LATAM, Middle East and Africa and jointly leads on GFTN’s Forums around the world.
During his time at the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) between 2019-2022, he led the spinout of Elevandi Ltd in 2021, the first iteration of GFTN, building the strategy, plan, team and securing the seed capital. At MAS he led the International FinTech Office, a team which was responsible for building relationships in different jurisdictions between the public and private sectors and driving both FinTech and investment growth. Pat serves on the board of Mojaloop, an open-source software project of the Mojaloop Foundation. It was created by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s Level One Project in 2017.
Prior to MAS, Pat led the growth and launch of Money20/20 into Europe in 2015 to become the most the successful and profitable FinTech event in the region and subsequently led the product launch into Singapore and China. In his early career he worked at VocaLink on the world’s first national retail real-time payments system, the UK Faster Payments Service, and built the international strategy for the product and drove opportunities across Asia and Europe.
A seasoned international leader with experience of building products, teams and launches into new markets and leveraging networks to drive positive outcomes.
Boardroom, Ground Floor
Invite-Only
Stablecoins are global by design, yet their regulatory oversight remains stubbornly local. As regulations evolve across jurisdictions, a multi-issuance model is emerging — where a single global stablecoin is issued by separate, supervised entities in multiple markets. While token holders experience seamless fungibility, regulators grapple with fragmented reserves, unclear redemption chains, and the potential for systemic run risk.
This GFTN Select Boardroom moves beyond national and institutional silos to ask: what would a credible, proportionate cross-border regulatory framework look like if designed for this reality — one that ensures both interoperability and local financial stability?
If you would like to be part of the discussion, please register your interest here, subject to approval.