If you don’t hold the keys, do you truly have ownership?


I’ve spent my life building in payments and fintech. You’d think that would mean I always feel secure about my own money. The truth? Most of us don’t actually own our money - and here’s why that matters more than ever.
Banks can (and do) freeze accounts with a click. Payment processors blacklist users for “violations” of rules most never read. Entire custodians, those “safe” middlemen we trust, sometimes collapse overnight. It doesn’t take a banking crisis or a political shift; it could be a routine compliance check, a computer glitch, or a change in policy. Suddenly, the money you thought was yours isn’t really yours at all.
I’ve seen too many friends and colleagues get locked out of their own financial lives, often at the moment they needed access most. A recent example from Canada is a reminder of this reality. In early 2022, during a wave of protests, regulators ordered banks to freeze thousands of personal and business accounts with no warning. Their experience highlighted a fact many prefer not to consider: access to funds can be blocked instantly, even in stable democracies, regardless of how you earned them.
Let’s get real.
Ownership, in today’s financial system, is conditional. It’s subject to terms you didn’t write and gatekeepers you didn’t choose. And most of the time, you only discover those conditions when it’s too late to do anything about them.
Legacy payment systems are built for the convenience of intermediaries, not for the autonomy of individuals or businesses. We are asked to trust banks, payment processors, and “custodians”, yet our access to value is just a database entry away from being paused, reversed, or blocked.
Here, I believe we need a reset.
If your assets, your business revenues, or even your salary can be frozen without warning, are you truly sovereign? I say no.
The core of the solution is direct ownership. This approach removes unnecessary intermediaries and places authority where it belongs: in the hands of the user. Businesses and individuals need to move value, pay staff, or access working capital without waiting for permission. The technical and regulatory tools to support this model are no longer futuristic. Self-custodial wallets, programmable payments, and digital assets designed for compliance are already enabling a more resilient approach to ownership.
Flexibility is equally essential. The reality of today’s business is global, fast, and multi-currency. Stablecoins enable settlement across borders. Employees and freelancers increasingly expect options in how they receive compensation. Remittances flow in and out of markets every hour, often bypassing traditional rails. Ownership must mean flexibility: receiving, converting, and sending value according to actual business needs, not legacy limitations.
The era of conditional access is nearing its end. As more businesses adopt self-custodial solutions and demand real flexibility, the market is shifting. The standard for ownership is being redefined. Payment networks must now provide not only security and speed but also the assurance that access to value is never at risk from someone else’s decisions.
Stablecoins are showing the way forward - bridging old and new systems with stability, speed, and compliance. But the true promise of unbreakable financial freedom remains with Bitcoin. Unlike any other asset, Bitcoin stands outside the reach of monetary policy, corporate control, or unilateral seizure. It is the foundation upon which a world of interoperable, self-custodial value can be built, a world where stablecoins enhance flexibility, but Bitcoin guarantees sovereignty.
The future belongs to those who build, and choose, systems that make ownership absolute, never conditional.