Ripple has officially launched Ripple Treasury, a unified corporate treasury solution designed to give enterprises continuous, real-time access to global liquidity by merging traditional cash management with digital asset infrastructure.
The platform marks Ripple’s most direct push yet into the multi-trillion-dollar corporate finance market, following its $1 billion acquisition of GTreasury, a long-established treasury management provider used by major global corporations.
The move positions Ripple not just as a payments company, but as an infrastructure provider for modern corporate balance sheets.
A 24/7 Treasury System Built for Global Capital
At its core, Ripple Treasury addresses one of corporate finance’s longest-standing inefficiencies: capital that sits idle due to slow settlement cycles and fragmented banking systems.
Today, we're proud to introduce Ripple Treasury, Powered by GTreasury: the world's first comprehensive treasury platform combining 40 years of proven enterprise expertise with cutting-edge digital asset infrastructure.
Many finance teams are stuck managing growing complexity… pic.twitter.com/4scNUggARS
— GTreasury (@GTreasury) January 27, 2026
Unlike legacy treasury tools tied to business hours and regional rails, Ripple’s platform operates 24/7, allowing corporate finance teams to manage liquidity, move capital, and execute cross-border transactions at any time.
The system brings multiple asset types into a single operating layer. Corporations can manage fiat cash, stablecoins such as RLUSD, and tokenized deposits from one centralized interface, removing the need to juggle separate banking, custody, and crypto platforms.
By connecting to Ripple’s liquidity rails, companies can also access global repo markets and short-term yield opportunities, unlocking capital that would otherwise remain “trapped” in slow, outdated settlement frameworks.
Designed for Institutional and CFO-Level Adoption
Ripple has emphasized that Ripple Treasury is built specifically for large enterprises rather than crypto-native firms.
The platform incorporates bank-grade custody, compliance controls, and reporting standards designed to meet regulatory and audit requirements faced by Fortune 500 treasury teams. This institutional focus reflects Ripple’s strategy to move digital assets from experimental use cases into core corporate financial operations.
According to the company, the goal is not speculation, but operational efficiency, liquidity optimization, and real-time capital mobility at global scale.
GTreasury Acquisition Anchors Enterprise Credibility
The launch follows Ripple’s acquisition of GTreasury in late 2025, a firm with over 40 years of treasury management experience and a client base of more than 1,000 global companies.
GTreasury’s existing software stack now forms the backbone of Ripple Treasury, while Ripple’s blockchain infrastructure adds real-time settlement, tokenization, and digital liquidity capabilities on top.
The treasury platform also integrates with Ripple’s other recent acquisitions, including Hidden Road, a prime brokerage focused on institutional markets, and Rail, a stablecoin and payments infrastructure provider. Together, these components form a full-stack ecosystem aimed at enterprise-grade digital finance.
Corporate Crypto Treasuries Move Toward Trillion-Dollar Scale
Ripple executives view this launch as a response to a broader structural shift in corporate finance.
On January 21, 2026, Ripple President Monica Long stated that corporate crypto treasury holdings could increase fivefold to reach $1 trillion by the end of 2026, driven by stablecoins, tokenized assets, and real-time settlement demands.
Industry analysts echo this outlook, estimating that around 50% of Fortune 500 companies will implement formal digital asset treasury strategies by the end of the year. That transition marks a move away from pilot programs toward fully integrated, production-grade financial infrastructure.
With Ripple Treasury, the company is positioning itself at the center of that shift, targeting not traders or consumers, but the balance sheets of the world’s largest corporations.






