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Description

In this Global Insight episode of On Aon, Tim Fletcher,national practice leader for the Financial Services Group for Aon, sits down with John King, senior vice president, global treasurer and head of portfolio strategy for Aon, to unpack the rapidly evolving world of stablecoins.



 

Tim and John examine stablecoins as a practical payments and operating model issue and dive into how they work, what differentiates them from other digital assets and why they’re increasingly on the agenda for treasurers, risk leaders and boards navigating global liquidity, regulation and cross-border payments.



 

Key Takeaways:

  1. There has been a convergence of factors driving stablecoin adoption: pressure on traditional payment options, demand for faster and cheaper cross-border transactions and the maturation of the digital asset ecosystem.
  2. Regulatory frameworks for stablecoin are becoming more defined: governments are starting to set expectations around reserves, governance and oversight.
  3. Even for those organizations that don’t see themselves as “crypto players,” stablecoin still matters: it touches core concerns such as payment efficiency, liquidity management and operational resilience.



 


Experts in this episode:



 

Key moments:



 

(1:50)

Tim and John explain what stablecoin is and isn’t — it’s a digital token designed to maintain a stable value, functioning more like a payment or settlement instrument than an investment asset.



 

(3:30)

Organizations are now viewing stablecoin as a payments and settlement infrastructure, especially for cross‑border transactions, treasury operations and liquidity management.



 

(8:15)

Stablecoin is not a universal solution and leaders need to weigh complexity against any proven upside.



 

Additional Resources:

A Simple Guide to Stablecoins and Tokenized Assets — Webinar (March 11 and 19) Register Here



 

Soundbites: [two key quotes from the episode]

Timothy Fletcher:

“Even if an organization never touches stablecoin directly, understanding the implications is becoming part of staying informed about how money moves.”



 

John King:

“The question isn’t just “does this work right now?” but “how might this change, and are we prepared when it does?”