Digital finance in 2026: what to expect as pilot schemes move into real-world use



Digital finance has moved into the mainstream as regulated stablecoins and tokenised assets scale up, but industry experts say 2026 will be defined by success in developing interoperable, regulated, use-case-driven rails rather than more digital silos.

As more than 130 jurisdictions explore central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), alongside dozens of stablecoin initiatives and a growing array of tokenisation platforms, day-to-day payments and finance are undergoing a rapid structural overhaul.

While these digital money and asset experiments promised greater efficiency, transparency and speed, they also risked deeper fragmentation, regulatory pitfalls and operational vulnerabilities, experts warned.

“The cracks are not technical; they are regulatory, geopolitical and operational,” said Florian Spiegl, founder and CEO of digital investment platform Evident Group. Cyberattacks and bridge failures were hitting the connections between ledgers rather than blockchains themselves, raising the risk that liquidity could be trapped in incompatible regulatory regimes and turn markets into regional “walled gardens”, he added.

Hong Kong, positioned as a leading digital asset hub with active regulatory frameworks, has emerged as a template for cross-border cooperation, concrete compliance standards and institutional-grade readiness, according to Deng Chao, CEO of HashKey Capital. “The entry of major economies and large commercial institutions into stablecoins and tokenisation is a positive signal that the industry is moving towards mainstream adoption,” he said.

“Blockchain and Web3 technology are inherently global, but real-world applications must be embedded in regulation and local use cases.”

  • Related Posts

    From chocolates to scotch, what gets cheaper for Indians? – Firstpost

    It’s taken three years, but the moment is finally here. The Free Trade Agreement between India and the United Kingdom kicks into effect today (July 15), opening one of the…

    Continue reading
    SK Hynix shares surge 13% as AI optimism and easing US inflation reignite chip rally – Firstpost

    Shares of SK Hynix soared nearly 13 per cent in Seoul on Wednesday, leading a rally in South Korea’s semiconductor sector after softer-than-expected US inflation data lifted global technology stocks…

    Continue reading

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *