Jeannie Lim is a seasoned fintech leader in the payments sector. Currently she is the Co-Founder of Xweave. Previously serving as Executive Director & Head of APAC at Paxos, the leading regulated blockchain & tokenization infrastructure platform, Jeannie brings a wealth of expertise in blockchain-based solutions. Prior to this, she played a pivotal role on Meta's Payments team, spearheading Messaging Payments on WhatsApp, Messenger, and leading the launch of the Novi crypto wallet.
With a strong focus on go-to-market strategies, business development, and revenue growth, Jeannie has held key leadership positions at Fiserv and Worldpay in Singapore, where she targeted enterprise e-commerce players across the APAC region. Jeannie’s ability to identify and capitalize on growth opportunities has been instrumental in driving success across diverse markets.
Before relocating to Singapore, Jeannie spent 20 years in the United States, where she honed her skills in payments and fraud prevention industry. Her deep understanding of the industry led to her recent nomination as an Ambassador for the Merchant Risk Council, where she is actively building out merchant communities across APAC.
Jeannie’s career is marked by a commitment to driving innovation and fostering growth in the fintech landscape, making her a trusted advisor and influential leader in the industry.
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.