Daniel is Director, EU Digital Assets and Financial Services, at Forefront, based in Brussels. He delivers bespoke, intelligence-led advisory services to a global client base, helping organizations translate regulatory, market, and geopolitical developments into strategic decisions. He regularly convenes senior industry and policy representatives in Brussels to facilitate high-level discussions on financial services.
Previously at Giesecke+Devrient, Daniel led CBDC design consultancy projects, collaborated closely with financial ecosystem partners on strategic and design aspects, and supported multiple CBDC pilot projects. He co-authored several thought-leadership papers (e.g., G7/T7), engaged directly with central banks, financial institutions, and international organizations, and regularly spoke at major global industry events. His team was also selected as a finalist in the G20 TechSprint competition.
Before joining G+D, Daniel served as a lead consultant at the CBDC Think Tank Budapest, focusing on digital currency solutions for central banks and financial service providers. One of his primary research areas focused on the impact of digital currencies on international finance and the evolving composition of global reserve currencies.
Earlier in his career, as Director for Institutional Fund and Wealth Management at Hold Asset Management, a regional boutique hedge fund, he advised a broad range of institutional clients on capital markets, macroeconomic trends, and portfolio management.
Roundtable Room 2, Ground Floor
Invite-Only
As the adoption of stablecoins accelerates globally, policymakers and financial institutions are confronting a deeper structural question: what form of money will anchor the next generation of digital finance?
Deposit tokens have emerged as one of the leading responses to this challenge, combining the safeguards of the traditional banking system with the programmability and efficiency of distributed ledger technology. However, despite growing institutional interest, most initiatives remain confined to pilots and closed networks, even as stablecoins rapidly achieve scale, distribution, and integration across digital asset ecosystems.
This roundtable brings together banks, infrastructure providers, and policymakers to examine the regulatory, legal, operational, and governance challenges that constrain adoption of tokenized deposits, and the extent to which deposit tokens will coexist with or compete against stablecoins and other forms of digital money. It will also explore the growing push by jurisdictions worldwide to develop local-currency stablecoins as a strategic counterweight to dollar-denominated instruments and what these twin approaches - local currency stablecoins vis-a-vis on-chain commercial bank money - mean for the future shape of digital money.
Critically, the discussion will pose a broader strategic question for policymakers and financial institutions alike: whether tokenized commercial bank deposits can provide a sovereign and trusted foundation for the digital economy, or whether the future of digital money will be predominantly shaped by private stablecoin ecosystems, and the role of jurisdiction-specific stablecoin models therein.