
When Treasury Meets Digital Assets: A Strategic Turning Point for Liquidity
With the only regulated euro and US dollar stablecoins issued by a major banking entity, Societe Generale-Forge (SG-FORGE) opens a new chapter for corporate treasury. As digital assets mature, treasurers are reassessing their relevance beyond experimentation. In this expert view, our experts examine what digital money can realistically deliver for treasury and why regulated, bank‑issued stablecoins may represent a tangible solution.
SG-FORGE’s issuance of Europe’s first regulated euro and US dollar stablecoins marks an important milestone for corporate treasury. As digital assets move beyond experimentation, treasurers are now asking a fundamental question: Do digital assets address concrete treasury pain points, or do they add complexity without solving structural issues? Insights on the implications of digital money for corporate treasury management, by Stéphanie Cabossioras (Chief Strategy & Global Policy Officer, SG-FORGE) Geneviève Douhet (Director of Digital Assets Programs, Global Transaction Banking, Societe Generale), and Floor Meeuwis (Director of Liquidity and Virtual Account Management Advisory, Global Transaction Banking, Societe Generale).
The expanding digital money market
Digital assets have reached a scale that treasurers can no longer ignore. Global digital asset markets now exceed USD 2.5 trillion1 , with stablecoins alone representing more than USD 300 billion historically driven by trading but increasingly used for payments and settlement. This acceleration is no coincidence. Regulatory clarity, notably MiCA2 in Europe and evolving frameworks such as the GENIUS Act in the US, is enabling institutional grade adoption. At the same time, payment expectations are shifting: global, instant and always on value transfer is becoming the new benchmark.
What digital money enables
Digital money brings capabilities that traditional infrastructures struggle to offer natively:
24/7 real-time value transfer, beyond banking cut-off times;
Faster and cheaper settlement, with fewer intermediaries;
Programmability, enabling automated and conditional payments;
Global reach, supporting cross border and ecosystem driven business models.
A structural shift is underway. Digital assets such as stablecoins, once mainly used as invisible settlement layers between two fiat currencies, the so called “stablecoin sandwich”, are now evolving into full fledged treasury instruments.
Real time treasury: A growing imperative for corporates
Many corporates still operate in batch based environments, managing end-of-day liquidity positions. The concept of “real-time treasury” may therefore appear premature. Yet expectations are changing.
Real-time treasury does not mean abandoning control. It means moving from forecast based liquidity management to flow based optimization, characterized by:
Continuous cash visibility, both on- and off-chain;
Immediate funding and settlement, with intraday optimization;
Reduced liquidity buffers and trapped cash.
As payment ecosystems become more global and digital, treasurers increasingly need liquidity at the right time, in the right place, instantly.
A deep dive into digital assets in the treasury landscape
Treasurers today face an expanding range of digital money options, increasing both choice and complexity:
Private Digital Money
Volatile cryptocurrencies (Bitcoin - BTC3 , Ether - ETH4 ): generally unsuitable for treasury liquidity, but relevant for specific digital economy use cases;
Stablecoins, backed by fiat or high quality assets, issued by banks or non banks, regulated or not;
Tokenised deposits, issued against commercial bank liabilities, evolving from closed loop models to multi bank instruments;
Tokenised money market funds, enabling regulated yield generation on chain.
Public Digital Money
Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs), retail or wholesale, still emerging but strategically important.
However, integrating digital assets into treasury operations comes with a set of challenges.
From promise to execution: The challenges to tackle
Operational disruption driven by real time operations
While digital assets enable near real-time liquidity, they also reshape treasury operating models. Traditionally organized around batch-based processes and daily cut-off times, treasurers now face almost continuous liquidity movements, requiring new monitoring tools, revised workflows and extended operational coverage. Beyond the implications for treasury’s interaction with banks, this transformation also affects internal treasury organization, as ERP systems and AP/AR processes need to move toward real-time operation.
A gap between financial speed and physical business cycles
Real-time treasury does not automatically translate into real-time business operations. Many industries remain anchored to physical logistics cycles, production, shipping and delivery still take time, limiting the immediate monetization of real-time liquidity.
Stronger control, risk and compliance requirements
Near instant settlement heightens the need for robust controls. As with instant payment infrastructures, digital assets require upgraded fraud prevention mechanisms, as well as careful management of FX exposure, counterparty risk and cross jurisdictional compliance, reinforcing the importance of regulated custody and compliant on- and off-ramp solutions.
Accounting, reporting and integration constraints
Digital assets only deliver value when fully integrated into existing treasury ecosystems. Accounting treatment must be clearly defined, while ERP and TMS readiness remains uneven. Without seamless integration, treasurers lack end to end visibility across on chain and off-chain environments.
In summary, corporate adoption is shaped by three overarching challenges:
• Fragmentation across blockchains, requiring interoperability with legacy systems;
• Reliable on- and off-ramp capabilities to ensure last mile liquidity;
• Re-emergence of frictions when returning to fiat, notably tax, accounting and regulatory considerations.
What sets apart Europe’s first bank issued regulated stablecoins
This is where regulated, bank issued stablecoins, such as those issued by SG-FORGE, change the equation. With EUR CoinVertible and USD CoinVertible, SG-FORGE provides corporates with stablecoins fully integrated into the banking ecosystem.
These instruments effectively act as pre funded on chain nostro accounts, offering:
• Instant settlement,
• Programmability,
• 24/7 availability,
• Real time liquidity when needed.
From a competitive advantage perspective, corporates do not adopt technology for novelty. They adopt it when it solves operational issues, frees up liquidity and reduces friction, allowing teams to focus on higher value activities. This is precisely where regulated stablecoins deliver tangible value.
Practical corporate use cases
Stablecoins behave like cash on-chain, enabling several treasury use cases:
• Cross-border payments outside banking hours across complex corridors;
• Intra group liquidity management, including real-time sweeping and cross-currency pooling;
• Third-party instant settlement, subject to counterparty acceptance;
• Yield generation, via tokenised money market funds or selected DeFi protocols.
From a liquidity perspective, treasurers expect lower intraday buffers, dynamic cash allocation and enhanced transparency. Treasury is shifting from discrete cycles to continuous optimization.
Outlook: What comes next for digital liquidity
Digital assets are unlikely to fully replace traditional payment rails. Instead, treasurers should expect a hybrid model, combining traditional and tokenized infrastructures. Promising developments include:
• Programmable and agent-based payments, automating treasury processes;
• Expansion into trade finance, collateral management and tokenized real world assets,
• A growing role for major payment players acting as gateways between systems.
Treasury managers should start preparing now by updating policies, frameworks and risk assessments.
Digital money is no longer theoretical. It is already reshaping liquidity management, settlement efficiency and cash visibility. Yet this transformation comes with challenges: fragmentation, regulatory diversity, operational change and integration complexity. For corporates, the priority is clear: engage early, define a strategy, and choose regulated partners. Treasury must evolve as the technology does.
1:coinmarketcap
2:MiCA, Market in Crypto Assets
3:BTC, Bitcoin
4:ETH, the native cryptocurrency of the Ethereum blockchain




