May 19, 2025 paper by Polina Kempinsky comparing the instant payment systems of Brazil and India, drawing lessons on their organizational structure, market impact, and unintended consequences to provide a framework for decision-makers in other regions considering the development of similar systems.
April 17, 2025, Podcast with Tim Massad and Howell E. Jackson: "Crypto is merging with mainstream finance. Regulators aren’t ready."
April 4, 2025, Paper by Dan Awrey, Howell E. Jackson and Tim Massad: "The paper aims to inform policymakers about how to craft legislation that promotes innovation while safeguarding financial stability and national security interests."
February 26, 2025, Congressional hearing: "With the growth of stablecoins and digital assets as well as fast payment systems generally around the world, we must make sure that the technology for cross-border payments flowing through the federal payments infrastructure remains at the cutting edge."
February 11, 2025 Congressional Hearing: "The hearing will examine existing use cases for digital assets and blockchain technology and explore why this technology holds enormous potential to revolutionize the American economy."
January 31, 2025, interview with Tim Massad: "The stated purpose of the Executive Order is to support the responsible development of digital assets in blockchain. I can't imagine an action that is more contrary to that stated purpose than issuing these meme coins just as he takes office."
May 10, 2023, Testimony/Video: "Hearing Entitled: The Future of Digital Assets: Measuring the Regulatory Gaps in the Digital Asset Markets, No Excerpt, Hearing."
March 28, 2023, Video: "The CFTC has sued Binance on allegations that the crypto exchange offered unregistered crypto derivatives products and directed U.S. customers to evade compliance controls through the use of VPNs."
November 30, 2021, Audio: " Tim Massad, former chairman of the CFTC, tackles the challenges in designing a U.S. central bank digital currency, including how not to disintermediate banks—and why policymakers need to accelerate their discussions."