
ECB chief economist Philip Lane puts tokenization and AI at the center of central banking's future at the 2026 Sintra forum, with a dedicated session on unified ledgers and digital money.
The European Central Bank's chief economist is spending this week talking about two things that would have gotten you laughed out of a central banking conference five years ago: artificial intelligence and tokenized money.
Philip R. Lane, who has served on the ECB Executive Board since June 2019, is a central figure at the 2026 ECB Forum on Central Banking, running June 29 to July 1 in Sintra, Portugal. The forum's theme this year revolves around innovation and digitalization's effects on monetary policy and financial stability.
Lane is scheduled to sit down on June 30 for a conversation about artificial intelligence with Aaron Chatterji, the chief economist at OpenAI.
On July 1, Lane shifts gears to chair a panel on Europe's evolving role in the global trade landscape.
Perhaps the most consequential session for crypto and digital asset watchers is a dedicated July 1 discussion titled "Tokenisation: challenges and opportunities when money, payments and financial transactions become digital."
The session highlights a paper from Bank of Korea Governor Hyun Song Shin on unified ledgers – the idea that traditional financial assets, central bank money, and commercial bank deposits could all live on a single programmable platform.
No specific crypto tokens were mentioned in the context of the forum's discussions. The conversation is framed around the broader digitalization of money and payments rather than any individual digital asset.
Lane has recently reiterated that the ECB remains "proactive" in managing inflation risks. His comments come as energy prices normalize following years of geopolitical disruption, though he has noted that second-round effects from those earlier price spikes are expected to emerge gradually.
Lane's previous role as Governor of the Central Bank of Ireland gave him a front-row seat to the eurozone debt crisis. The ECB has been exploring a digital euro for years, and every step forward on that project raises questions about whether it crowds out private-sector stablecoins or creates new rails that benefit the entire ecosystem.
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