From working on Intel’s finance team to the adrenaline of FX trading, to leading embedded payments at Silicon Valley Bank, Michael Wilson has built a career at the intersection of banking and FX markets. Today, as Managing Director of Partnerships at Monex USA, he’s helping financial institutions and fintechs access cross-border payments once reserved for the largest global banks.
After more than a decade in foreign exchange sales at U.S. Bank and Silicon Valley Bank, and working on the front lines of global events like Brexit, he now focuses on enabling community banks and fintechs to expand their offerings through modern technology.
In this conversation, Wilson reflects on what hooked him on FX, offers his take on stablecoins and new payment technologies, and explains why community banks shouldn’t overlook the opportunity international payments present for non-interest income and client growth.
When I graduated from college, I found an opportunity with a regional bank that had a trading desk, and it seemed like a natural fit with my background in economics and finance.
I was immediately drawn to the fast-paced world of sales trading. The market is exciting and challenging, and in my role I got to partner with all kinds of institutions. Early in my career, I worked with CFOs before earnings calls to brief them on the macroeconomic environment. Now, I work more with fintechs and financial institutions, collaborating with chief product officers on strategy and working alongside product teams to map out processes and integrations. Each situation is unique, which keeps it engaging.
FX is the largest market in the world, but you don’t learn much about it in school. Once you’re in the banking world, you quickly see how significant and impactful it is on global markets.
I remember working through Brexit. I did a 24-hour shift, taking quick breaks for food or coffee, while watching the markets move in real time. The phone was ringing off the hook with people calling from Europe asking for updates, and we were constantly refreshing Bloomberg terminals to see what was happening. That kind of high-stakes, real-time market reaction hooked me. I learned that I thrive in that kind of uncertainty and chaos.
Between Acceleron and Monex, you’ve got two teams with deep expertise in banking and foreign exchange. We’re both relatively smaller institutions, which I see as an advantage; we can be nimble and customize solutions for clients.
You can think of our partnership as a seamless integration into a financial institution where they get the whole support of a trading desk, global payment rails, and the customer service they couldn’t otherwise build in-house.
That means access to SWIFT, local rails, multicurrency holding accounts, and hedging capabilities, all through one clean integration point. For community banks, it’s an opportunity to expand their international offerings without the heavy lift.
From an FX perspective, many community banks don’t feel a direct impact because they aren’t offering FX today. But there are indirect effects. For example, interest rates are deeply influenced by global political and economic events, and interest rates have a huge impact on financial institutions.
That’s where FX can come in as an opportunity. It provides a non-interest income stream. If interest income is declining and spreads are contracting, FX gives banks another product to offer clients that helps offset some of that pressure.
Absolutely. It’s a missed opportunity. If their clients aren’t getting FX services from them, they’re getting them from someone else.
Through integrations with partners like Acceleron, banks can offer FX and international payments without building a trading desk or major infrastructure. The barrier to entry is much lower than many bankers realize. Offering those global capabilities might attract larger, more sophisticated customers that bring in bigger deposits, and it’s better for the business.
I like to use the David versus Goliath analogy. Big banks like JPMorgan can spend billions on technology every year; Community banks can’t keep up with that. But by partnering with companies like Acceleron and Monex, they can access best-in-class payment rails and infrastructure without any capital outlays.
As for stablecoins and other “trendy” products, community banks don’t need to be first movers. They can watch how the market evolves, then invest in the solutions that stick. Meanwhile, focusing on core offerings like cross-border payments and FX already gives them a competitive edge.
I’m extremely color blind. Red and green are tough for me, but I also can’t tell the difference between yellow and green. It’s not ideal for chemistry labs, and that’s why I dropped pre-med! Fortunately, in FX, most things are black and white, so it works out.
Acceleron is a modern correspondent banking platform that empowers community banks and credit unions to automate international wire transfers, capture non-interest income, and compete more effectively with big banks. With a foreign exchange (FX) marketplace and currency conversion engine, Acceleron’s API-first infrastructure helps institutions turn cross-border payment flows into efficient, revenue-generating opportunities. Serving over 200 financial institutions and facilitating more than $1 billion in international payments annually, our correspondent banking services and international payment automation solutions are pre-integrated seamlessly with Fiserv Payments Exchange, Braid, and other leading payments platforms.
Contact us to learn more about how international wire automation can benefit your FI.