Corporate treasury teams are under growing pressure to manage liquidity faster, respond to market volatility in real time, and maintain visibility across increasingly fragmented banking relationships.
For many large companies, the old treasury model built around spreadsheets, delayed reporting cycles, and disconnected banking portals is no longer sufficient.
A new wave of AI-led treasury platforms is beginning to change that.
Treasury technology providers are now embedding artificial intelligence directly into forecasting, reconciliation, liquidity planning, and payment operations. The objective is not simply automation, but creating treasury systems that can continuously analyse financial activity and support faster decision-making.
This shift is happening at a time when global corporates are facing more complex operating conditions. Higher interest rates, supply chain disruptions, geopolitical uncertainty, and rising cross-border transaction volumes have all increased the importance of treasury agility.
As a result, finance teams are prioritising real-time cash visibility and more accurate forecasting capabilities.
Spain-based fintech Embat recently raised EUR 30 million to expand its AI-powered treasury management platform across Europe. The company focuses on areas such as automated reconciliation, liquidity visibility, and cash forecasting for enterprise treasury teams.
US treasury platform provider Trovata has also been expanding AI-driven treasury capabilities built around API banking connectivity and automated cash management workflows.
The broader direction of the market is becoming increasingly visible. Treasury functions are moving away from static reporting environments toward systems capable of delivering continuous financial intelligence.
This transformation is also closely tied to the rise of API banking and real-time payments infrastructure.
Corporate treasury teams increasingly expect live access to balances, payment flows, receivables data, and liquidity exposure across multiple banking partners and regions. That demand is pushing banks and fintech firms to invest more heavily in connected treasury ecosystems.
According to a 2025 survey by PwC, improving cash visibility and forecasting accuracy ranked among the leading priorities for multinational treasury and finance leaders.
Large financial institutions are responding aggressively to this shift.
JPMorgan Chase continues expanding its Kinexys digital payments infrastructure for institutional clients, particularly around programmable payments and tokenised liquidity movement.
Recent developments are also showing how treasury infrastructure is beginning to intersect with blockchain-based settlement systems.
This week, Ondo Finance completed a cross-border tokenised US Treasury redemption pilot involving Kinexys by J.P. Morgan, Mastercard, and Ripple.
The growing overlap between treasury operations, payments infrastructure, and digital settlement networks is becoming harder to ignore.
Importantly, the current treasury transformation cycle is not being driven only by efficiency or cost reduction.
Many corporates are now viewing treasury resilience as a strategic priority. Delayed visibility into liquidity positions or payment flows can create operational risk during periods of volatility, particularly for companies operating across multiple trade corridors and currencies.
AI-powered treasury systems are increasingly being deployed to support:
- liquidity forecasting
- automated cash positioning
- anomaly detection
- payment prioritisation
- scenario modelling
- working capital optimisation
For banks, treasury infrastructure is becoming strategically important because it sits at the centre of corporate financial activity.
Banks, fintech firms, ERP providers, and payment infrastructure companies are all competing to strengthen their position inside enterprise treasury operations.
Recent partnerships across the payments ecosystem reflect this broader convergence.
Comviva and Unlimit recently partnered to integrate payment infrastructure capabilities into merchant ecosystems globally, while Worldline continues expanding unified payment infrastructure solutions for international enterprise clients.
The treasury function itself is also evolving.
What was once viewed largely as an operational finance role is steadily becoming a real-time strategic control centre responsible for liquidity, risk management, financial visibility, and enterprise cash optimisation.
As treasury systems become more intelligent and interconnected, the competitive landscape across transaction banking is likely to shift alongside them.
