- The launch follows Ripple’s $1 billion acquisition of GTreasury.
- It integrated established corporate treasury capabilities into its business.
Ripple rolled out Ripple Treasury, an enterprise platform that lets companies manage traditional cash and digital assets in one system. It follows its roughly $1 billion acquisition of GTreasury.
The blockchain-based payments firm positions the product as a way for corporate finance teams to handle payments, liquidity, and short-term investments through a single interface rather than separate banking and crypto tools.
Ripple Treasury uses the company’s RLUSD stablecoin to move money across borders, with settlement times of reportedly around three to five seconds instead of the three to five business days typical for international bank wires.
The company says this approach reduces idle capital locked in transit and gives treasurers faster visibility over group-wide cash positions.
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The platform integrates into existing corporate treasury workflows through APIs that pull balances and transactions from digital asset platforms into the same dashboards treasurers already use for cash, debt, and short-term investments.
The goal is to treat crypto-based payment rails as an extension of the current banking infrastructure rather than a standalone system that requires manual processes.
Beyond payments, Ripple Treasury connects users to overnight repo markets and tokenized money-market funds, including BlackRock’s BUIDL. This setup allows corporates to move excess balances into yield-bearing instruments at any time, instead of leaving funds in bank accounts that only operate during business hours.
The launch is Ripple’s first major product release since it bought Chicago-based GTreasury in October, bringing established enterprise treasury software and relationships into the group.
Ripple is also drawing on infrastructure from Hidden Road, the prime brokerage it acquired last year, to provide access to short-term funding markets as it seeks to reposition itself as institutional financial infrastructure rather than a crypto-only payments provider.
