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never lose faith crypto guys, maybe the women of your life is still in production https://t.co/UcuaZhyTnP
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never lose faith crypto guys, maybe the women of your life is still in production https://t.co/UcuaZhyTnP
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crypto bros would have $3 MILLION in crypto and choose to live like this https://t.co/PlCN1WY2K6
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crypto bros would have $3 MILLION in crypto and choose to live like this https://t.co/PlCN1WY2K6
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crypto guys will live like this to save an extra $500 every month for the dip https://t.co/WNAMS6ROjY
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crypto guys will live like this to save an extra $500 every month for the dip https://t.co/WNAMS6ROjY
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Offshore
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realizing I go to work everyday at 6 AM because I was too shy to dance on tiktok in 2020 https://t.co/5wCw9o5REj
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realizing I go to work everyday at 6 AM because I was too shy to dance on tiktok in 2020 https://t.co/5wCw9o5REj
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You choose crypto as solid investment but you need to work on weekends as well https://t.co/4Vx7fhB5Px
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You choose crypto as solid investment but you need to work on weekends as well https://t.co/4Vx7fhB5Px
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With inflation at 6.9%, you lose half your money in 8 years.
The only way to outperform that consistently, that I have found, is crypto.
Just this year, I’ve already lost half my money. https://t.co/WEXqL6Ttxw
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With inflation at 6.9%, you lose half your money in 8 years.
The only way to outperform that consistently, that I have found, is crypto.
Just this year, I’ve already lost half my money. https://t.co/WEXqL6Ttxw
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EndGame Macro
The BIS Blueprint for the Next Payment System
If you strip away the technical framing, this BIS bulletin is basically admitting that the global payments system hasn’t caught up with the goals set years ago. The G20 wanted cheaper, faster, cleaner cross border payments by 2027, but the BIS is now saying, almost in plain language that they’re not going to get there on time. Most of the policy groundwork is done, but the part that actually matters like getting countries and private institutions to implement the changes is moving slowly. The technology isn’t the weak link anymore. Coordination is. Incentives are. And the old system’s inertia is.
That’s the real message is that the plumbing we rely on for moving money across borders is overdue for a rebuild, and the existing institutions are struggling to retrofit it while keeping everything stable.
Where Blockchain Actually Fits In Here
What’s interesting is how the paper sidesteps the flashy, headline version of crypto entirely. But if you read between the lines, it’s very clear where the BIS sees the future. They talk about connecting fast payment systems across countries, introducing programmability, making settlement continuous, and building platforms that can move different types of money across the same rails. That’s basically the blueprint for tokenised deposits, multi CBDC platforms, and permissioned blockchain systems.
It’s not Bitcoin. It’s not DeFi. It’s the kind of institutional blockchain that lives behind the scenes like programmable, supervised, and interoperable and it’s meant to do the things today’s correspondent banking system fundamentally can’t. Tokenisation is the part of the bulletin that comes closest to revealing the bigger play. They’re hinting that the real breakthrough won’t be a new messaging format or incremental upgrades; it’ll be a programmable settlement layer that can sit underneath everything and actually unify it.
Where This Is All Heading
If you follow the logic of this bulletin to its end, the direction is pretty clear. Cross border settlement is going digital, tokenised, and highly coordinated. The money itself, whether issued by a central bank or a private bank will increasingly travel through systems that look a lot more like blockchain infrastructure than the clearing networks we use now. And the rails connecting all of it will depend on interoperability, not isolated systems patched together with workarounds.
That doesn’t mean the BIS is going to embrace public blockchains; it means the design principles of blockchain like programmability, shared ledgers, atomic settlement are now being moved into the regulated world on terms policymakers can accept. They want the efficiency without the chaos. The innovation without the loss of control. And they will choose whatever platforms let them do that.
My View
The future the BIS is describing is one where the global financial system quietly migrates to tokenised infrastructure, and the networks that already specialize in interoperability will eventually become the connective tissue. It won’t look like a crypto revolution but more like the plumbing changing underneath the floorboards and then one day everyone realizes the house works differently than it used to.
tweet
The BIS Blueprint for the Next Payment System
If you strip away the technical framing, this BIS bulletin is basically admitting that the global payments system hasn’t caught up with the goals set years ago. The G20 wanted cheaper, faster, cleaner cross border payments by 2027, but the BIS is now saying, almost in plain language that they’re not going to get there on time. Most of the policy groundwork is done, but the part that actually matters like getting countries and private institutions to implement the changes is moving slowly. The technology isn’t the weak link anymore. Coordination is. Incentives are. And the old system’s inertia is.
That’s the real message is that the plumbing we rely on for moving money across borders is overdue for a rebuild, and the existing institutions are struggling to retrofit it while keeping everything stable.
Where Blockchain Actually Fits In Here
What’s interesting is how the paper sidesteps the flashy, headline version of crypto entirely. But if you read between the lines, it’s very clear where the BIS sees the future. They talk about connecting fast payment systems across countries, introducing programmability, making settlement continuous, and building platforms that can move different types of money across the same rails. That’s basically the blueprint for tokenised deposits, multi CBDC platforms, and permissioned blockchain systems.
It’s not Bitcoin. It’s not DeFi. It’s the kind of institutional blockchain that lives behind the scenes like programmable, supervised, and interoperable and it’s meant to do the things today’s correspondent banking system fundamentally can’t. Tokenisation is the part of the bulletin that comes closest to revealing the bigger play. They’re hinting that the real breakthrough won’t be a new messaging format or incremental upgrades; it’ll be a programmable settlement layer that can sit underneath everything and actually unify it.
Where This Is All Heading
If you follow the logic of this bulletin to its end, the direction is pretty clear. Cross border settlement is going digital, tokenised, and highly coordinated. The money itself, whether issued by a central bank or a private bank will increasingly travel through systems that look a lot more like blockchain infrastructure than the clearing networks we use now. And the rails connecting all of it will depend on interoperability, not isolated systems patched together with workarounds.
That doesn’t mean the BIS is going to embrace public blockchains; it means the design principles of blockchain like programmability, shared ledgers, atomic settlement are now being moved into the regulated world on terms policymakers can accept. They want the efficiency without the chaos. The innovation without the loss of control. And they will choose whatever platforms let them do that.
My View
The future the BIS is describing is one where the global financial system quietly migrates to tokenised infrastructure, and the networks that already specialize in interoperability will eventually become the connective tissue. It won’t look like a crypto revolution but more like the plumbing changing underneath the floorboards and then one day everyone realizes the house works differently than it used to.
The motivations behind the #G20 Roadmap for enhancing #CrossBorderPayments are as relevant as ever. Challenges remain, but progress has been made across many parts of the payments ecosystem, laying the groundwork for better end user outcomes. https://t.co/RjSvINxEtk
#BISBulletin https://t.co/Qe7SsipuTv - Bank for International Settlementstweet