George Davis reveals why global dollar clearing is fundamentally broken

The architecture of a fragmented financial system

Most financial technology companies spend their energy polishing the user experience, but they remain tethered to an antiquated foundation.

, CEO of
Lorum
, argues that while the global payment system isn't technically "broken," the participants operating it are misaligned. The current infrastructure relies on a dwindling number of tier-one banks, such as
Citibank
and
J.P. Morgan
, which were never designed to handle the sheer volume of modern electronic money institutions and real-time payment demands.

George Davis reveals why global dollar clearing is fundamentally broken
George Davis, Founder & CEO at Lorum on Rebuilding Global Clearing, Why Dollars Are Broken, and B...

At the core of this friction is the correspondent banking model. When money moves across borders, it often passes through a chain of intermediary banks. These institutions are frequently more interested in building lending books and capturing overnight interest rates than they are in moving capital efficiently. This creates a bottleneck where settlement finality is delayed and fees are opaque. Davis identifies this as the "hardest layer of the stack"—the clearing layer—and it is exactly where Lorum is staging its disruption.

Solving the dollar liquidity crisis in emerging markets

A surprising revelation in Lorum’s growth trajectory is the absolute dominance of the US dollar, even in regions where local currencies were expected to lead. Davis notes that

saw its business grow 55x in a single year, largely driven by the demand for dollar clearing outside the United States. In markets like India, Africa, and the Middle East, the ability to settle in dollars is often more critical than local currency integration.

International dollar clearing is notoriously difficult. Many US community banks that offer these services are heavily focused on lending, leading to conservative risk appetites and slow processing for international financial institutions. Lorum's solution involves a 100% reserve-backed model. By refusing to lend out customer deposits, the company eliminates the incentive to hold onto funds for liquidity or interest-rate arbitrage. This "payments-only" bank model ensures that the primary objective is always immediate settlement, a stark contrast to the legacy banking giants.

Rebuilding the clearing stack from the ground up

Lorum’s technological approach bypasses the manual hurdles that still plague international finance. Davis recounts early days in

where payments required physical couriers and wet signatures—a testament to the infrastructure gap in the Middle East. To solve this, Lorum built a proprietary ledgering system and a network of virtual accounts that can be deployed in seconds.

These virtual accounts allow international customers to hold funds in-country without a physical presence, facilitating "high-quality" payments with guaranteed settlement times. By stitching together central bank-connected systems globally, Lorum provides a unified cash management platform. This includes access to wholesale FX instruments and tokenized money market funds, allowing CFOs to manage risk and earn yield on idle capital within a single interface. The goal is to match the $80 billion business lines of incumbents like

by focusing exclusively on the plumbing of global trade.

The founder's philosophy on obsession and impact

For Davis, success in fintech requires a level of obsession that goes beyond the desire for a quick exit. He warns aspiring entrepreneurs against building solutions in search of problems. His own drive stems from a relentless questioning of why money moves the way it does. This intensity has shaped Lorum’s culture into one of radical transparency and directness.

High-growth environments are notoriously taxing, but Davis believes that aggressive growth acts as a cultural lubricant. When a team feels they are having a high impact on a systemic problem, morale remains resilient even during operational setbacks. This focus on the "metal" of financial infrastructure—rather than just a pretty UI—is what Davis believes will define the next generation of fintech unicorns. He points toward the fixed income and bond markets as the next frontier for this brand of deep-tech disruption, where manual, over-the-counter processes still reign supreme.

Future outlook for infrastructure disruption

The landscape of global finance is shifting toward specialized, high-velocity clearing houses. As Lorum expands its licensing footprint across Asia, Europe, and the US, the reliance on traditional correspondent banks will likely diminish. The future belongs to those who own the fundamental rails. By eliminating the conflict of interest between lending and clearing, new entrants are proving that the most profitable path forward isn't just moving money—it's rebuilding the system that allows it to move.

4 min read