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Fabio Panetta elected Chair of Bank for International Settlements Board

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Fabio Panetta elected Chair of Bank for International Settlements Board

Fabio Panetta, the Governor of the Bank of Italy and a long-standing skeptic of unbacked cryptocurrencies, has been elected Chair of the Board of Directors of the Bank for International Settlements. He will assume the role on 3 June 2026 for a three-year term, succeeding François Villeroy de Galhau.

The BIS is essentially the central bank for central banks. It coordinates monetary policy among 63 member central banks and sets the intellectual agenda for global financial regulation.

A crypto critic takes the wheel

Panetta’s views on crypto are well-documented and decidedly unenthusiastic. He has repeatedly warned that unbacked crypto assets pose risks to financial stability and that large private stablecoins could threaten monetary sovereignty.

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His preferred alternative has always been central bank digital currencies. Panetta has been one of the most vocal advocates for the digital euro during his time at both the European Central Bank and the Bank of Italy. He sees CBDCs not as a nice-to-have experiment, but as a necessary defensive move by central banks to maintain relevance in a digitizing financial system.

The BIS strategy review and what comes next

Panetta’s election arrives at a particularly consequential moment. The BIS is currently completing a strategy review that will shape its priorities for the coming years. The institution has been expanding its work on digital finance, launching innovation hubs and research programs focused on how tokenized assets and programmable money might reshape the plumbing of global finance.

The announcement also included other notable appointments. Gabriel Galípolo, head of the Central Bank of Brazil, was named Chair of the meeting of Governors from September 2026.

What this means for crypto investors

The BIS sets the tone for how central banks coordinate on financial regulation. Its research papers, committee recommendations, and Basel standards form the intellectual scaffolding that national regulators build on.

Panetta has specifically flagged global stablecoins — the kind issued by large tech companies or widely adopted across multiple jurisdictions — as potential threats to monetary sovereignty. That framing could influence how regulators approach reserve requirements, licensing, and cross-border stablecoin usage in the years ahead.

On the flip side, projects working on tokenization of real-world assets or building infrastructure that could integrate with CBDC systems might find a more receptive audience. The BIS has shown genuine interest in tokenized settlement and programmable money, and Panetta’s enthusiasm for CBDCs suggests continued institutional support for these applications.

Fabio Panetta elected Chair of Bank for International Settlements Board