Contributors
Paul Aldrich
Dr. Paul Aldrich is Managing Partner at CTPartners, a premier executive search firm, in Hong Kong. He has a Doctorate in Business from Durham University.
Paul Odoom
Paul Odoom is the President & CEO of The Moodo Group, an investment banking firm in Chicago, IL.
Paul Taylor
Paul Taylor is the Managing Director of BT’s International Banking business unit. He is responsible for the secure and resilient technology provision, cybersecurity, and digital transformation for the world’s largest banks. Paul brings significant business transformation and digital enablement expertise gained across multiple sectors and geographies.
Pedro Garcia
Pedro Garcia is the Executive Consultant at Litmus Group.
Peiying Chua
Peiying is Financial Regulation Partner at Linklaters, Singapore. She is widely regarded as a leading financial regulatory lawyer, advising clients in Singapore and internationally on all issues associated with financial regulation. She leads the firm's Singapore financial regulatory practice, and advises banks, investment managers, broker-dealers, market operators, commodity houses, insurance companies and intermediaries, as well as technology and other companies expanding into the fintech sector. She has advised on various innovative fintech initiatives, such as Asia-based digital securities offerings and partnership arrangements between banks and fintech firms.
Penny Chai
Penny Chai is the vice president of business developmente for APAC at Sumsub, a UK-headquartered payments verification company.
Peter Hill
Peter Hill is Managing Director of United Kingdom & Middle East at SimCorp Ltd. He joined in February 2006 following a 26-year career in IT management and sales. Prior to joining SimCorp, he was managing director of Fiserv Asia Pacific.
Commentary
Asia’s electronic markets reach an inflection point of transformation
Tokenisation in the Philippines: The consumer is ready, but is the infrastructure?
Asian firms need to get ready for digital assets and currencies
AI can build your plan, but can it hold you to it?
Built to last: How Japan is approaching the cross-border payments challenge