

The Problem: Global Fragmentation
In today’s rapidly evolving financial ecosystem, innovation is no longer constrained by borders—but regulation still is.
Fragmented frameworks across the U.S., UK, and EU are slowing progress, increasing costs, and creating uncertainty for the very companies driving the future of fintech.
The Fintech Accord exists to solve this problem.
We move beyond predicting regulation—to actively shaping and aligning it through a unified, cross-border platform rooted in our founding principle: education through advocacy.

"We exist to move beyond reporting and predicting regulation
— to actively architecting it."
The Harmonization Strategy
From Fragmentation to Alignment
The Fintech Accord is built on a single, powerful idea: global alignment is possible—but only through coordinated regulatory leadership.
Regulatory Harmonization
Bridging policy frameworks across the U.S., UK, and EU to reduce friction and unlock innovation.
Education Through Advocacy
Equipping policymakers with real-world industry insight to shape smarter regulation.
Coordinated Global Influence
Creating a unified voice that architects with regulators—before policy is written, not after.

The Transatlantic Taskforce for Markets of the Future
Launch & Mandate
Formally established during the U.S. Presidential State Visit in September 2025, the Taskforce represents a historic alignment between U.S. and UK leadership. Originated through the Financial Regulatory Working Group (FRWG), The Taskforce is to report back to both finance ministries being U.S. Treasury and His Majesty's Treasury.
Led by the UK Chancellor of the Exchequer and the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, its mandate is clear:
To align Digital Asset, Capital Markets, and the corresponding Fintech and Payments regulatory frameworks across two of the world’s most influential, compatible and consequential financial systems.
Operational Engagement
The Fintech Accord serves as the industry’s U.S. gateway into this dialogue, maintaining active engagement with senior leadership across both governments, including:
Chancellor of the Exchequer
UK First Secretary of Finance
UK Deputy Trade Commissioner
U.S. Treasurer
U.S. Counsel to The Secretary of Treasury
U.S. Assistant Secretary for International Finance
This is not theoretical collaboration—it is active policy participation at the highest level.

