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2024 Speakers

Keynote Speakers

Linda BernardiLinda Bernardi

Former Chief Innovation Officer, IBM
Serial Entrepreneur and Innovation Author

As an author, futurist, serial entrepreneur, strategist, investor, lecturer and board member, Linda Bernardi lives and breathes technology disruption and innovation. She works with startups and large companies alike to inspire enterprises to build a culture of mindful innovation. Bernardi’s academic and professional background is in data and artificial intelligence (AI). She was founder and CEO of the world’s first internet of things (IoT) company. As chief innovation officer at IBM, she was involved with introducing IBM Watson®, a computer system capable of answering questions posed in natural language. In her role as head of strategy at Consensys, Bernardi influenced blockchain and cryptocurrency (Ethereum) adoption, especially by the financial sector. She is currently co-founder and chief executive officer at XDMind Inc. Her books include ProVoke (2011), which discusses the necessity of innovation culture, and The Inversion Factor (2017), focusing on how technologies such as AI, IoT, blockchain – along with an open mindset – can allow us to build experiences, not just products.

Nellie LiangNellie Liang

Under Secretary for Domestic Finance
U.S. Department of the Treasury

Nellie Liang was confirmed as the Under Secretary for Domestic Finance at the U.S. Treasury Department in July 2021. Previously, Liang was a senior fellow in economic studies at the Brookings Institution, a visiting scholar at the International Monetary Fund’s Monetary and Capital Markets Department, lecturer at the Yale School of Management, and a member of the Congressional Budget Office’s Panel of Economic Advisors. Over three decades on the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Liang held a range of positions, including as the first director of the Division of Financial Stability from 2010 to 2017. In that position, she oversaw the development of financial stability policies related to risks in financial firms and financial markets, and interactions of financial policies with monetary policy.

Alex StamosAlex Stamos

Chief Information Security Officer, SentinelOne; Former CISO, Facebook, Adjunct Professor, Stanford

Alex Stamos is a cybersecurity expert, business leader and entrepreneur working to improve the security and safety of the Internet. Alex is a professor at Stanford and in his previous role as chief trust officer at SentinelOne, a global leader in AI-powered security, Stamos helped lead its PinnacleOne Strategic Advisory Group. He was the founding director of the Stanford Internet Observatory at the Cyber Policy Center, a part of the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies. Before joining Stanford in 2018, Stamos was the chief security officer of Facebook, chief information security officer at Yahoo, and co-founder of security consultant iSEC Partners. He is an advisor to Stanford’s Cybersecurity Policy Program and University of California, Berkeley’s Center for Long-Term Cybersecurity. He is a member of the Aspen Institute’s Cyber Security Task Force, the Bay Area CSO Council, the Council on Foreign Relations, and the advisory board to NATO’s Collective Cybersecurity Center of Excellence in Tallinn, Estonia.

Federal Reserve Hosts

Austan GoolsbeeAustan D. Goolsbee

President & Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

Austan Goolsbee leads the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago and serves on the Federal Open Market Committee – the Federal Reserve System’s monetary policymaking body. The Chicago Fed conducts research and monitors local economic conditions to support formulation of monetary policy, supervises and regulates banking organizations, and provides financial services to financial institutions and the U.S. government. Before joining the Chicago Fed in 2023, Goolsbee was the Robert P. Gwinn Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. He is known for his empirical research on many different industries and on economic policy. Goolsbee has been a Fulbright Scholar, Alfred P. Sloan Fellow, member (then chair) of the Council of Economic Advisers, and member of the President’s cabinet. Goolsbee also has served on the Board of Education for the City of Chicago, the Economic Advisory Panel to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the Panel of Economic Advisers to the Congressional Budget Office, the U.S. Census Advisory Committee, the Digital Economy Board of Advisors to the Commerce Department, and the External Advisory Group on Digital Technology for the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Ellen BromagenEllen Bromagen

First Vice President & Chief Operating Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

Ellen Bromagen oversees the operational and financial performance of the Chicago Fed, including its Detroit Branch. She is also vice chair of the Bank’s Executive Committee, a member of the Loan Committee that reviews district discount window lending, and back-up to the Chicago Fed president in execution of monetary policy responsibilities. In addition, Bromagen is a key contributor to formulating and advancing the Bank’s strategic priorities and ensuring an inclusive environment. Since joining the Chicago Fed in 1990, Bromagen has held a variety of management positions in the areas of payments, corporate accounting and financial planning, spanning both local operations and national responsibilities.

Tom BarkinTom Barkin

President & Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond

Tom Barkin is the president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond. He has held this position since 2018. Barkin serves as a voting member on the Fed’s chief monetary policy body, the Federal Open Market Committee, and is also responsible for the Richmond Fed’s bank supervision and the Federal Reserve’s technology organization. He is “on the ground” continually in the Fed’s Fifth District, which covers South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, D.C., West Virginia and Maryland. His engagement in the region has brought real attention to areas facing economic challenges. Prior to joining the Richmond Fed, Barkin was a senior partner and CFO at McKinsey & Co., a worldwide management consulting firm, where he also oversaw McKinsey’s offices in the southern United States. Barkin earned his bachelor’s, MBA and law degrees from Harvard University.

Mark GouldMark Gould

Chief Payments Executive
Federal Reserve Financial Services

Mark Gould has provided executive leadership to a range of Bank functions at the intersection of payments, technology, strategy and operations during his career. As Federal Reserve Financial Services’ chief payments executive, he is responsible for the Federal Reserve’s full portfolio of cash, retail, wholesale and instant payment services across the United States. Gould’s career began in the Retail Payments Division of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. From February 2014 to 2021, he served as the chief operating officer and first vice president of the San Francisco Fed. From this position, he led the Federal Reserve System’s Cash Product Office, which oversees the processing, quality and distribution of U.S. currency domestically and internationally. Gould began his current role in March 2021.

Shonda ClayShonda Clay

Executive Vice President, Chief of Product and Relationship Management
Federal Reserve Financial Services

Shonda Clay leads integrated product development for the Federal Reserve’s portfolio of payment products, as well as its engagement and communications with financial institutions and the payments industry. In addition to leading Federal Reserve Financial Services’ customer relations, customer experience, marketing communications, research and payments improvement initiatives, Clay also serves on the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago’s executive committee. She joined the Federal Reserve in the 1980s and championed the Federal Reserve’s work that led to the Strategies for Improving the U.S. Payment System white paper in 2015 and the Federal Reserve’s subsequent payments improvement initiatives.

Kassi QuimbyKassandra Quimby

Senior Vice President, Head of Marketing & Strategic Industry Engagement
Federal Reserve Financial Services

Kassandra (Kassi) Quimby is responsible for marketing, payments system improvement and industry engagement for Federal Reserve Financial Services (FRFS). Marketing seeks to drive awareness, engagement and action among FRFS customers and other payment stakeholders through cross-channel communications, from websites to webinars. Quimby also oversees industry relations, including managing relationships with key influencers and supporting industry and Federal Reserve initiatives and work groups. In addition, Quimby is responsible for advancing payments system improvement to support the overall integrity, efficiency and accessibility of the U.S. payment system. Before taking on her current role, Quimby was vice president of industry engagement and programs in the Customer Relations and Support Office, where she managed several programs to support industry readiness for the FedNow® Service and co-led work to advance business-to-business payments efficiency. Quimby has held various leadership positions across the Federal Reserve System since beginning her Fed career at the Board of Governors in 2002.

Panel Session Speakers

Global Payments

Evolution of Instant Payments

Innovation on Top of Current Payment Rails

Scams, Security, & Information Sharing

Digital Currency, Digital Assets and Settlement