European Central Bank’s Escrivá calls for finance infrastructure review due to AI risks

José Luis Escrivá, one of the European Central Bank’s most vocal voices on modernization, is pushing central banks to take a hard look at whether their financial infrastructure can survive the AI era. His message is straightforward: the systems that underpin European finance were not built for a world where machine learning models can move markets, generate synthetic data, or exploit vulnerabilities at speeds no human regulator can match.
What Escrivá is actually saying
The core argument is about resilience. Central banks, in Escrivá’s view, need to proactively review the infrastructure that processes payments, settles trades, and manages risk, specifically through the lens of what AI introduces. Not AI as a productivity tool. AI as a systemic risk vector.
Escrivá has also been advocating for regulatory simplification across European financial markets. His remarks also touch on solvency frameworks, flagging vulnerabilities in how European institutions currently measure and manage risk.
The tokenisation angle
Escrivá’s push for modernized infrastructure dovetails with the ECB’s broader support for tokenisation, the process of representing traditional financial assets as digital tokens on distributed ledgers.
The ECB has been exploring proposals for deeper capital markets integration that include tokenisation interoperability, making it so tokenized assets issued on one platform can move seamlessly to another, with consistent standards and settlement guarantees.
92% of corporate debt in Europe is dominated by bank loans. That concentration makes the system fragile and illiquid in ways that tokenisation could address by opening up bond markets to a broader set of investors and creating more efficient secondary trading.
The ECB’s Financial Stability Review has already flagged risks from rising sovereign bond issuance across the eurozone.
What this means for crypto investors
There’s no direct line between Escrivá’s AI infrastructure warnings and Bitcoin or Ethereum prices. Nobody at the ECB is suggesting that decentralized protocols are the answer to AI risk in financial systems.
The push for tokenisation-compatible infrastructure creates regulatory legitimacy for the underlying technology. When the ECB talks about interoperable tokenized assets, it validates the concept even as it tries to keep the implementation within institutional guardrails.
The emphasis on AI resilience could accelerate regulatory scrutiny of any financial platform, crypto or otherwise, that lacks robust safeguards against AI-driven manipulation.
The market appears poised for potential regulatory support for AI-resilient tokenised assets, but scrutiny over infrastructure interoperability may place pressure on solely private crypto platforms. The cost of compliance could consolidate power among the largest, most well-capitalized platforms at the expense of smaller innovators.
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