Ripple just announced its $1 billion acquisition of GTreasury, a global leader in treasury management systems, marking its most ambitious move yet into traditional finance. The deal positions Ripple to offer blockchain-powered liquidity and payments solutions to the corporate treasury market, a space managing trillions in global cash flow.
According to Ripple, the integration will allow CFOs and finance teams to unlock idle capital and process instant cross-border transactions, merging GTreasury’s experience with Ripple’s digital asset infrastructure.
Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse expressed enthusiasm about the deal, stating, “Together, we’re giving treasurers the ability to activate their capital rather than let it sit idle.”
GTreasury CEO Renaat Ver Eecke called the merger “a step toward modernizing treasury management,” combining Ripple’s blockchain network with GTreasury’s compliance and forecasting tools to offer real-time liquidity and risk management under one platform.
Ripple extends its institutional footprint
The acquisition aligns with Ripple’s broader strategy to expand institutional access to digital assets. Yesterday, Ripple partnered with Absa Bank in South Africa to introduce institutional-grade crypto custody, its first initiative of this kind on the continent. The move expands Ripple’s custody network to Europe, the Middle East, Asia-Pacific, and Latin America.
Recent developments reflect Ripple’s efforts to integrate blockchain infrastructure directly into the global financial system. While the GTreasury deal brings Ripple into corporate finance at the enterprise level, the Absa partnership focuses on regulated digital asset storage for emerging markets.
As regulators formalize digital asset frameworks around the globe, the company’s approach shows how blockchain is becoming an operational standard for global finance rather than a side system.
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