Cash management

A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z

What is Cash management?

Cash management refers to the short term operational cash flow management, including the monitoring, the analysis and the optimisation of the cash flow of a company. 
The bank plays a key role during this operation, by transferring funds from one account to another to balance the cash flow. It requires transfers, foreign currency transactions, and possibly the use of derivatives (currency swaps). 

Example

A company X has several subsidiaries around the world, and each one has one or more bank accounts denominated in different currencies. Some of the accounts may be overdrawn, others may have cash surpluses. In order to optimise cash flow, the bank will use the accounts with cash surpluses to cover the overdraft ones. 
Another example would be cash pooling, which consist of pooling funds from different bank accounts into a single cash pool in order to better manage foreign currency flows and borrowing costs. 

  • If there is a cash surplus, the bank will invest this surplus in different products: loans, Treasury bills, commercial paper on behalf of the client.
  • If there is a cash shortfall, the bank will refinance the client under the best possible conditions. This refers to liquidity management. 

What is Liquidity management? 

Companies want to manage their liquidity as efficiently as possible, especially those that operate in several countries and therefore hold accounts with many different banks. Managing liquidity in this way can be particularly complex. 

Effective bank liquidity management relies on a centralised process to gain full visibility into the company's liquidity position. Liquidity management can be made more efficiently with the use of digital technologies and access to the sources of information about the corporate treasury departments.

What is Treasury management? 

Liquidity management is a complement to Treasury management, which can be understood as the overall strategic management in the long term, including the planning, organisation and control of the holding of funds, or working capital, of a company. 

The goal of these finance departments is to make the best use of funds and maintain liquidity to reduce the overall cost of obtaining funds and to mitigate operational and financial risks.

These activities therefore cover:

  • working capital management
  • currency management
  • financial risk management

In simple terms, it is the management of all financial affairs of the company such as fundraising from various sources, currency management, cash flow and various financing strategies and procedures.

Discover

Our Payments & Cash management Solutions

Our latest news and insights

Transaction Banking in Transition: A Blueprint for Integrated Global Solutions
As global trade undergoes one of its biggest transformations in decades, transaction banking has become a strategic...
Expert views
As global trade undergoes one of its biggest transformations in decades, transaction banking has become a strategic priority rather than a back-office function. In response, Andreea Parneci and Florence Escaffre, co-deputy heads of Global Transaction & Payment Services, outline how to deliver the real-time visibility, seamless global coverage and solutions...
Transaction Banking in Transition: A Blueprint for Integrated Global Solutions
Navigating New Frontiers: The Evolving Role of Treasurers in a Complex World
Welcome to this new whitepaper, in which we bring together four of today’s most pressing topics for corporate...
Expert views
Welcome to this new whitepaper, in which we bring together four of today’s most pressing topics for corporate treasurers. All are connected, in the midst of ongoing global trading uncertainty, by the urgency with which each must be tackled, whether in risk mitigation or in the leveraging of opportunity.
Navigating New Frontiers: The Evolving Role of Treasurers in a Complex World
Accelerating heavy transport electrification
Societe Generale supported Zetra, a pioneering French player in electric heavy mobility, in financing a portfolio of...
Clients' successes
Societe Generale supported Zetra, a pioneering French player in electric heavy mobility, in financing a portfolio of charging points dedicated to trucks. The Bank acted as Structuring Bank, Mandated Lead Arranger, Sole Lender, Hedge Provider, Facility Agent, and Account Bank, in Europe’s first non-recourse project financing dedicated to electric truck charging...
Accelerating heavy transport electrification