TL;DR:
Ripple announced the launch of Digital Asset Accounts and Unified Treasury, two functionalities integrated within its Treasury platform. According to the company, it is the first system for enterprise treasury management with native digital asset capabilities, enabling CFOs and their teams to manage liquidity in fiat and cryptocurrencies from a single interface, without relying on external custodians, independent exchanges, or manual reconciliation processes.
The platform supports XRP and RLUSD —Ripple’s stablecoin— alongside traditional currencies, treating them equivalently within existing treasury workflows. Renaat Ver Eecke, Senior Vice President of the Treasury division, noted that digital assets have already arrived at the CFO’s desk and that the question is no longer whether to incorporate them but how to do so without disrupting current operations.
Mark Johnson, Vice President of Global Product at Ripple Treasury, explained that the incorporation of Digital Asset Accounts will eliminate many limitations that have historically held back corporate adoption of digital assets. According to Johnson, integrating functionalities directly into existing treasury workflows allows companies to avoid the need for additional infrastructure, extra counterparties, or external tools. This enables them to generate yields on idle cash around the clock through the Payments and Prime tools.

The launch of this product was made possible by the acquisition of GTreasury, completed in 2025, a firm with four decades of experience in enterprise treasury management that processed $13 trillion in payment volume last year for a client portfolio that includes both SMEs and Fortune 500 companies. Ripple aims to layer crypto industry tools onto enterprise infrastructure, rather than building from scratch.
According to a recent report by Standard Chartered, the stablecoin market capitalization will surpass $2 trillion by the end of 2028. Ripple’s global expansion continues to advance as well — the company is seeking regulatory licenses in Brazil and Australia, where it is managing the acquisition of BC Payments to operate within that country’s regulated financial services framework.