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    Home»Trade Finance»Tokenised cash begins reshaping transaction banking as global banks move to 24/7 liquidity models
    Trade Finance

    Tokenised cash begins reshaping transaction banking as global banks move to 24/7 liquidity models

    By Digital Trade OutlookApril 1, 2026
    Tokenised cash begins reshaping transaction banking as global banks move to 24/7 liquidity models

    Global banks are quietly rewriting how money moves—turning traditional deposits into always-on, programmable liquidity as tokenised cash begins to move from pilot projects to real-world deployment.

    From Fixed Timelines to Continuous Settlement

    For decades, corporate banking has operated within fixed timelines, with payments tied to banking hours, cut-offs and batch processing. That model is now being steadily dismantled. Tokenised deposits allow funds to move instantly and continuously, aligning banking infrastructure with the 24/7 nature of global trade and financial markets.

    What Makes Tokenised Cash Different

    At its core, tokenised cash is a digital representation of bank deposits, issued on secure distributed systems and backed one-to-one by funds on a bank’s balance sheet. What makes it different is programmability—money can now carry instructions.

    A simple use case captures the shift: a corporate can send funds with a built-in condition to release payment only when goods are delivered. Once verified, settlement happens instantly—cutting delays, reducing counterparty risk and removing manual intervention. Money, in effect, no longer waits for banks.

    Take a typical trade scenario: a Jaipur-based company importing goods from Singapore would normally send a bank transfer that takes one to two days to settle, with limited control once the payment is initiated. With tokenised cash, the same payment can be programmed to release only when the shipment reaches Chennai port—moving instantly but settling only after the condition is met, reducing delays, manual follow-ups and transaction risk.

    Global Banks Accelerate Deployment

    Recent moves by leading institutions suggest the transition is gathering pace.

    Bank of Montreal in March 2026 announced plans to roll out 24/7 tokenised cash capabilities in collaboration with Google Cloud and CME Group. The platform will allow institutional clients to convert US dollars into tokenised instruments for margin, collateral and settlement—on a continuous basis.

    Derek Vernon, Head of Treasury and Payment Solutions at BMO, said the effort is aimed at aligning banking with market realities: “Clients will be able to move funds continuously when markets demand it, not when banking hours allow it.” (Reuters, March 2026)

    In Asia, Standard Chartered, working with Ant International, has already launched a blockchain-based tokenised deposits solution under Hong Kong’s Project Ensemble. The platform enables real-time transfers across HKD, CNH, USD and SGD, targeting treasury and working capital flows.

    The bank said the platform is aimed at improving settlement efficiency and enabling real-time treasury operations for corporate clients.

    Taken together, these moves point to a deeper shift—less about faster payments, and more about redesigning how liquidity itself is managed.

    From Payments Processing to Liquidity Infrastructure

    The implications for transaction banking are structural.

    Banks have traditionally focused on processing payments efficiently. With tokenised deposits, they are moving toward becoming real-time liquidity providers—embedding themselves deeper into how corporates manage cash.

    Programmable money allows funds to move with conditions attached, enabling use cases such as automated cash pooling, conditional trade payments and instant collateral transfers.

    As CME Group said in a statement, the initiative will allow firms to “meet margin requirements and settlement obligations in real time, freeing up capital.” (CME Group, 2026)

    For corporate treasurers, this means continuous visibility over liquidity, better capital efficiency and tighter integration with internal systems. In trade finance, it could shorten cash cycles and reduce dependence on slower correspondent banking networks.

    Asia Leads Adoption, Europe Builds Frameworks

    Geographically, the shift is unfolding unevenly.

    Asia has emerged as an early mover, helped by regulatory sandboxes and strong intra-regional trade flows. Hong Kong’s Project Ensemble and similar initiatives in Singapore are enabling real-money pilots, particularly in cross-border treasury operations.

    Corporates are already beginning to move liquidity across currencies and entities in real time—reducing idle balances and friction in key trade corridors.

    Industry participants say demand is being driven by the need for faster working capital cycles and more responsive liquidity management.

    Europe, by contrast, is taking a more measured path. The European Central Bank is working to integrate tokenised systems with existing financial infrastructure, including TARGET services, while advancing plans for a digital euro.

    The ECB has emphasised the need for tokenised central bank money to support private-sector innovation while preserving financial stability.

    The result is a dual-track evolution—faster experimentation in Asia, and more regulated, system-led development in Europe.

    Drivers and Implications

    The timing of this shift is not accidental.

    Global markets are increasingly operating around the clock. Corporates want real-time visibility over cash. At the same time, the rise of tokenised assets is creating demand for equally fast settlement infrastructure.

    For banks, tokenised deposits are also a strategic move—helping retain liquidity within regulated systems amid growing competition from stablecoins and alternative digital assets.

    As BMO noted in its announcement, the broader goal is to bring “regulated money into a modern, programmable environment” (Reuters, 2026).

    For corporates, the benefits are more immediate: faster transactions, lower settlement risk and more efficient use of capital.

    Challenges Remain, but Direction Is Clear

    The transition is not without friction. Integration with legacy systems, interoperability across platforms and regulatory alignment remain key challenges.

    Even so, the direction of travel is becoming harder to ignore.

    Transaction banking is no longer just about moving money—it is increasingly about managing liquidity in real time.

    The shift may be gradual, but its implications are far-reaching. As tokenised cash scales, it has the potential to reshape how money flows across borders, industries and financial systems.

    Bank of Montreal Blockchain corporate treasury Cross Border Payments digital liquidity liquidity management programmable money real time payments Standard Chartered tokenised cash tokenised deposits Trade Finance Transaction Banking

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