Ex-PayPal CEO opines on everything from crypto to Cobol

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Former Intuit CEO Bill Harris was one of the earliest fintech leaders, arguably before fintech was a thing. He was also briefly the CEO of PayPal around the turn of the millennium.

Today, he leads Miami-based investment management firm Evergreen Wealth Corp. He also has a lot to say about innovations in payments and advances taking shape in that sphere. Payments Dive caught up with Harris earlier this month for an interview about digital payments, crypto and what’s driving the world of fintech in the era leading into the new Trump administration.

Editor’s note: This interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.

PAYMENTS DIVE: What’s your take on stablecoins?

BILL HARRIS: That’s fundamentally the most important of the potential crypto developments. Because, if we’re talking about crypto as an investment, then things like Bitcoin would have their own volatility come into play. If you’re looking for something to fund a payment network, particularly a payment network where people are operating in a fiat currency in the real world, and are really looking for crypto to be a quicker and less expensive mechanism for moving money, then doing it in fiat currency on a blockchain makes more sense if you try to build a payments network. So, stablecoin, I think, has got a big future, whether it’s private or issued by central banks.

Do you think the Trump administration will pursue a central bank digital currency?

On the one hand, I think there’s going to be less support for the financial regulatory apparatus, and [there will be] an attempt to reduce regulation. Of course, a great deal of the regulation on the federal side of the crypto world has been, essentially, to make it more difficult for unregulated crypto exchanges, etc. to flourish. The other side of it, though, is that I would bet that the deregulatory impulse goes even farther than that, and rather than pushing, or allowing, the central bank in this country to issue its own stablecoin, my guess is that it really opens up to private issuers of stablecoin. I would guess that that privately-issued stablecoin, denominated in U.S. currency, is likely to have a day in the sun.

What about cryptocurrencies?

As a payment network, as long as most of the world operates on a fiat basis, then it seems unlikely that a cryptocurrency — and I’m not saying blockchain, I’m not saying stablecoin — becomes the baseline for a large payments network simply because it means that for domestic translations, you’re doing two conversions, one into the cryptocurrency and then one back out. And even for cross border activity, you’re doing two conversions, as opposed to one, which would be just the the sender’s fiat and the receiver’s fiat. So in either case, for a payments network, a separately denominated currency seems like, at the very least, not an advantage and potentially a disadvantage.

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