Finance and Technology Conference 2023 on Decentralized Finance

How to build Trust in Decentralized Finance?

April 26th, 2023, Starling Hotel, EPFL

Decentralized Finance (DeFi) started out with the promise to disrupt the financial industry by removing third parties and centralized institutions from financial transactions and hence allowing consumers direct access to capital and financial services.

Until now, however, DeFi’s disruptive forces have not manifested themselves purely favorably. In 2022 crypto currencies lost nearly $2 trillion in market value. Furthermore, the DeFi industry – often where it evolves into actually more Centralized Finance (CeFi) platforms – continues to be plagued by a disconcerting number of hacks, failures and bankruptcies (an insightful timeline here). While it might not be the underlying DeFi blockchain infrastructure that is to blame as such and some failures might also be excused through the to-be-expected glitches of a nevertheless still early-stage technology and its applications, some of the challenges can rather be attributed to the shortcomings of governance, regulation or the interfaces with centralized financial services and institutions.

During this conference we aim to shed light on what works and what does not in decentralized finance and how to build trust in it. We will discuss the way forward for socially and economically sustainable DeFi and what the next generation of DeFi may look like. Inevitably, the question whether more regulation will stifle or stimulate innovation, whether it may lead to a level-playing field that enhances security, compatibility between established and emerging players as well as consumer trust will arise. What are the key trends around the globe that influence an inherently interconnected market? What are the most promising options at hand?

This event is organized jointly by the Finance and Technology Programme and the Center for Digital Trust, EPFL, in collaboration with The Enterprise for Society Center (E4S).

Schedule


08h30

Registration and welcome coffee


09h15

Welcoming words

by Damir Filipovic, Professor, Head of the Swiss Finance Institute, EPFL


Part 1: Introduction

How to make sense of the recent DeFi and FinTech failures and why to (potentially) still make the case for DeFi?

09h20

Talk: Why decentralized finance (DeFi) matters

by Iota Kaousar Nassr, Senior Policy Analyst, OECD


Part 2: What works and what doesn’t in DeFi

Understanding the challenges and opportunities from an econ & finance perspective

09h45

Talk: On the quality of cryptocurrency markets: centralized versus decentralized exchanges

by Prof. Angelo Ranaldo, Chair in Finance & Systemic Risk, University of St. Gallen


10h15

Networking coffee


10h50

Talk: Central bank digital currencies and the emerging financial infrastructure

by Prof. Co-Pierre Georg, EDHEC Business School

Policy makers around the world are evaluating whether to introduce a central bank digital currency (CBDC). In this paper, we argue that a CBDC allows policy makers to maintain monetary sovereignty, improve competitiveness in the financial services industry, and lower the cost of payments. The technology choice implies important tradeoffs, notably between privacy and accountability, and pose significant practical challenges. Chief among those are interoperability, universal access, and scalability. We provide technical solutions that address the practical challenges and present policy makers with specific policy tradeoffs. We then evaluate these in light of practical experience we gained through various national CBDC pilots.


11h20

Talk: Governance minimization and immutability

by Robert Lauko, Founder and Head of Research, Liquity

Governance minimization aims to enhance trustlessness and transparency by making smart contracts as immutable as possible. While immutability mitigates the common risks related to on-chain voting (low participation, colluding majority, bribing etc.), it has its own challenges: what if there are bugs or unknown issues in a piece of code that isn’t upgradeable? Can a monetary system work autonomously without human intervention?


11h50

Networking lunch


Part 3: How to build trust in DeFi?

13h00

Talk: Is blockchain the right tool for DeFi? Understanding the fundamental limitations

by Gauthier Voron, Postdoctoral Researcher at Distributed Computing Laboratory, EPFL

This talk will give a perspective on Web3 by going back to the roots of the internet and the web, and explaining the link with blockchain technologies. The talk will also highlight some fundamental limitations of the very concept of a blockchain, suggest ways to circumvent these limitations and discuss the impact on decentralized finance.


13h25

Talk: [DeFi and cybersecurity]

by Ramsey el-Khazen, Head of Web3 Security, Kudelski


13h50

Talk: Tornado Cash and blockchain privacy – a primer for economists and policymakers

by Matthias Nadler, Doctoral Candidate, University of Basel


14h15

Panel: Regulation, enforcement and accountability – are they actually compatible with a decentralized world?

Moderated by Mark A. Greenslade, Head of Research and Development, Casper Association

Panelists

Victor Busson, CMO & Head of Strategic Partnerships, Taurus

Isabella Chase, Senior Policy Advisor, TRM Labs

Francisco de Fraga, Risks Officer, Sygnum Bank

Nico Hess, Legal and Policy Specialist, FINMA

Reto Luthiger, Partner, MLL Legal


15h10

Networking coffee


15h30

Keynote: Elements of the future monetary system

by Hyun Song Shin, Economic Advisor and Head of Research, Bank for International Settlements

This presentation examines alternative models for digital money, and the possible role of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) in these alternative models. The presentation compares a monetary architecture based on tokenised deposits underpinned by settlement using CBDCs with an alternative based on stablecoins that circulate. Tokenisation of securities and other claims would be additional elements that could enhance the functionality of the monetary system.


Part 4: Conclusion

16h15

Panel: What is the way forward for socially and economically sustainable DeFi?

Moderated by Jean-Pierre Danthine, Managing Director, Enterprise for Society (E4S)

Panelists

Michael Egorov, Chief Executive Officer, Curve Finance

Jacques Iffland, Chairman, The Capital Markets and Technology Association (CMTA)

Iota Kaousar Nassr, Senior Policy Analyst, OECD

Hyun Song Shin, Economic Advisor and Head of Research, Bank for International Settlements


17h10

Wrap up & thank you


17h15 – 18h00

Networking apéritif