Adam Gagen leads the Global Government Affairs function for Revolut, the UK’s largest fintech. Revolut has grown in 11 years to have more than 75M customers and operations in 41 countries. Adam leads their engagement with policymakers and other stakeholders around the world on shaping public policy interventions which make a real positive difference in people's financial lives. Adam joined Revolut in 2022 after five years leading Government engagement for American Express across the Europe, Middle East and Africa region. Adam originally started his career with the EU Commission in Brussels and then Taipei, following which he held regional and global advocacy roles in different sectors based out of Beijing, Hong Kong and Brussels. He and his family split their time between the UK and France. Adam has a Degree in Combined Social Sciences from Durham University and a Bachelor of Laws (LL.B) from London University.
Roundtable Room 1, Ground Floor
Open
Cross-border payments remain among the most expensive, slowest, and least accessible financial services globally. Stablecoins have emerged as a working alternative in the corridors underserved by traditional correspondent banking, processing significant volume alongside traditional rails, but questions of trust, reserve integrity, adoption, and systemic risk remain unresolved.
As regulatory frameworks mature across jurisdictions, this roundtable will explore the question of whether stablecoins are poised to graduate from a parallel system into genuine cross-border payment infrastructure, and what has to be true about their design, governance, and regulatory treatment for that to happen.
With payment-native banks, institutional settlement networks, and central banks at the table, the conversation will move beyond the technology debate to the harder questions of standards, coexistence, and who bears the risk when settlement infrastructure fails at scale.