Standard Chartered has hosted its inaugural Digital Assets Summit in Accra, highlighting what it sees as the growing role of stablecoins and other forms of digital money in reshaping cross-border payments across Africa.
The bank said accelerating adoption of digital assets was creating opportunities to improve the speed, cost and accessibility of cross-border transactions, while increasing the need for regulatory frameworks, risk management systems and trusted financial institutions to support the sector’s development.
Speaking at the summit in Accra, the bank’s Global Head of Digital Assets, Rene Michau, said stablecoins were increasingly moving payments and savings activity outside traditional financial rails, creating opportunities to improve efficiency while raising the need for stronger regulatory oversight and risk management.
He said Standard Chartered’s research estimated that the global stablecoin market, currently valued at about $300 billion, could expand to about $2 trillion by 2028.
The bank also expected significant migration of deposits into stablecoins across emerging markets as businesses and consumers seek more efficient mechanisms for payments and savings.
“The most transformative trend for cross-border payments will be stablecoins and other forms of digital money,” Mr Michau said, stating that existing infrastructure continued to create friction in intra-African trade and payments.
A stablecoin is a type of cryptocurrency whose value is pegged to another asset, such as the U.S. dollar or a commodity such as gold.
Mr Michau said digital assets were no longer a niche segment of financial markets but were increasingly becoming part of the broader evolution of money.
He argued that successful adoption would depend on balancing innovation with regulation, ensuring that new forms of money operated within trusted and well-supervised frameworks.
Context
The comments come as regulators across Africa, including the Bank of Ghana and the Securities and Exchange Commission, continue to develop frameworks for virtual asset service providers and broader digital asset activities.
Policymakers are seeking to harness the benefits of innovation while safeguarding financial stability, consumer protection and anti-money laundering standards.
Standard Chartered executives at the summit positioned digital assets as the latest stage in a long history of changes in payment systems, following transitions from physical cash and cheques to electronic banking, card payments and mobile money.
Payment efficiency
The Executive Director and Head of Markets at Standard Chartered Bank Ghana PLC, Jojo Bannerman, said digital assets should be viewed primarily as a tool for improving payment efficiency rather than as a replacement for existing monetary systems.
“The existing regulations around payments and currency sovereignty remain in place,” he said.
“Digital assets are an additional tool within the ecosystem,” Mr Bannerman added, pointing to cross-border trade as one of the most immediate use cases.
A trader in Ghana, for example, could make near real-time payments to suppliers in neighbouring countries without lengthy settlement periods, multiple currency conversions or the operational risks associated with carrying physical cash.
Mr Bannerman added that faster settlement could improve working capital management for businesses by reducing the need to hold idle foreign currency balances while transactions are processed, thus driving efficiency in payments.
Beyond payments, Standard Chartered also sees growing opportunities in the tokenisation of financial assets.
Mr Michau stated that tokenised money market funds and equities currently represented some of the largest segments of the tokenised asset market, arguing that broader growth would require digital representations of assets and money to develop simultaneously.
“The tokenisation of assets needs to happen alongside the tokenisation of money,” he said, citing stablecoins, central bank digital currencies and tokenised bank deposits as critical components of future market infrastructure.
The bank also highlighted the growing convergence between digital assets and artificial intelligence (AI), saying that as AI-driven systems become increasingly autonomous, programmable forms of money could enable machine-to-machine transactions and automated financial interactions.
BoG
Speaking at the summit, First Deputy Governor of the Bank of Ghana, Dr Zakari Mumuni, said digital assets had evolved from a niche market into a significant component of the country’s financial ecosystem, with the potential to support capital formation, cross-border trade and financial inclusion.
“The question is no longer whether digital assets will shape African finance.
They already are,” Dr Mumuni said, stating that more than three million Ghanaians were estimated to participate in the digital asset ecosystem, which accounts for activity worth billions of dollars.
Among the opportunities emerging from the sector, the deputy governor highlighted the tokenisation of real assets, which involves representing physical or financial assets in digital form on blockchain-based platforms.
According to him, such developments could enhance market efficiency, deepen capital markets and create alternative channels through which businesses access financing.
Executives stressed that banks would continue to play a central role in bridging traditional finance and emerging digital ecosystems.
Mr Michau said regulated financial institutions have a responsibility to develop the infrastructure, risk management tools and compliance frameworks necessary to support wider adoption.
He noted that banks are increasingly deploying blockchain analytics, digital asset market intelligence and other monitoring technologies to manage risks associated with the sector.
At the strategic level, Standard Chartered sees Ghana as well-positioned to participate in the digital asset transition.
Bank executives pointed to growing engagement among regulators, financial institutions, technology providers and market participants as evidence of increasing alignment on the future direction of the sector.
The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Standard Chartered Bank Ghana Plc, Xorse Godzi, said digital assets represented a strategic opportunity for Ghana to shape the future of finance while advancing financial inclusion, efficiency and innovation.
He emphasised that achieving those outcomes would require sustained collaboration among policymakers, regulators, businesses and financial institutions.
Similarly, Dalu Ajene, CEO and Head of Coverage for Africa at Standard Chartered, said digital assets were rapidly moving from experimentation to practical applications in trade, finance and payments.
He argued that Africa’s opportunity lay not only in adoption but also in building trusted, scalable and regulated market infrastructure.
