Trade finance is built on a model that no longer fits the reality it serves.
For decades, banks have relied on extending credit through instruments such as letters of credit and guarantees to facilitate global trade. That approach worked in a slower, more predictable system. It does not work in today’s environment of fragmented supply chains, real-time commerce and constant liquidity pressure.
Trade has accelerated. Finance has not kept up.
What matters now is not the ability to approve credit, but the ability to move capital instantly, across borders and without friction. Liquidity, not credit, is becoming the defining constraint. The institutions that recognise this shift will lead the next phase of transaction banking. Those that do not risk becoming operationally irrelevant.
Credit Is Static. Trade Is Not
The core problem is simple. Traditional trade finance is structured around static risk assessment and transaction-based credit exposure. Modern trade flows are dynamic, continuous and increasingly digital.
This mismatch is no longer theoretical. It is visible in how corporates operate. Supply chains now span multiple jurisdictions, settlement expectations are compressing, and treasury functions are under pressure to manage liquidity in real time. Waiting for credit approvals or relying on document-heavy processes is becoming a structural bottleneck.
Banks are responding, but unevenly. Liquidity-driven models such as receivables finance, supply chain finance and real-time cash management are gaining traction because they align with how trade actually functions. These models prioritise the movement of capital rather than the extension of balance sheet exposure.
The shift is already underway. Bank of Montreal’s move toward tokenised cash infrastructure is designed to enable continuous, 24-hour liquidity across institutional flows. Standard Chartered’s push into digital assets within transaction banking reflects a broader move toward programmable finance. At the same time, stablecoin-based settlement networks led by players such as Circle and Thunes are demonstrating that cross-border liquidity can move faster outside traditional banking rails.
The implication is uncomfortable but clear. Banks are no longer the only providers of liquidity in global trade.
Infrastructure Is Moving Faster Than Institutions
Much of the conversation around digital trade focuses on technology. That is no longer the limiting factor.
Frameworks such as Singapore’s TradeTrust and the Digital Container Shipping Association’s electronic bill of lading standards are solving long-standing inefficiencies in documentation and ownership transfer. The tools to digitise trade already exist.
The real problem is coordination.
Digital trade ecosystems remain fragmented, with competing standards, uneven regulatory adoption and limited interoperability. Liquidity can move quickly within closed systems, but struggles to scale across borders. This is not a technology failure. It is an institutional one.
The scale of the gap is hard to ignore. More than 80 percent of global trade transactions still rely on paper documentation, while the trade finance gap continues to exceed 2.5 trillion dollars. The industry has spent years digitising processes without fundamentally redesigning how liquidity flows through them.
Liquidity Is the New Constraint
Inside banks, the shift is already being felt. Trade finance is no longer primarily constrained by credit risk. It is constrained by balance sheet efficiency, capital costs and the ability to allocate liquidity in real time.
This is forcing a convergence between trade finance, payments and treasury. The boundaries between these functions are starting to dissolve as institutions attempt to build integrated liquidity platforms rather than standalone products.
For corporates, this is both an opportunity and a pressure point. Faster access to liquidity improves working capital efficiency and strengthens supply chain resilience. At the same time, expectations are rising. Suppliers expect faster settlement. Buyers expect more flexible financing. Treasury teams are managing liquidity across currencies and jurisdictions with increasing complexity.
The benefits, however, are not evenly distributed. Large corporates are capturing the upside, while SMEs remain locked out of much of the system. In some cases, the shift toward liquidity-first models risks reinforcing the very gaps it is supposed to address.
The Direction Is Clear, Even If the Path Is Not
Trade finance is no longer a product business. It is becoming an infrastructure business.
The institutions that succeed will be those that can move beyond episodic financing and build systems that enable continuous liquidity. This requires more than digitisation. It requires interoperability, regulatory alignment and a willingness to rethink long-standing operating models.
The uncomfortable reality is that much of the industry is still catching up.
Trade is already real time. Liquidity is expected to be. The gap between the two is where the next phase of competition will be decided.
Digital Trade Outlook Analysis
What is emerging is not just a shift in trade finance, but a redefinition of its role. Liquidity is no longer a supporting function layered onto trade. It is becoming the core infrastructure through which trade is executed.
The next phase will not be defined by who digitises fastest, but by who integrates best. Platforms, banks and networks that can connect liquidity across fragmented ecosystems will set the direction of global trade.
Trade finance is no longer about funding transactions. It is about ensuring that liquidity keeps moving, continuously and without interruption.
