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What are the opportunities and considerations of tokenized money market funds for corporate treasurers?

The article was first published in The Treasurer Issue 1, 2026.

www.treasurers.org/thetreasurer

 

With financial markets undergoing digital transformation, corporate treasurers face growing pressure to modernise liquidity management while maintaining robust risk controls. Tokenized money market funds (MMFs) are emerging as a compelling solution, enhancing a well‑established cash‑management tool with faster settlement, greater transparency and operational flexibility without altering the fundamental investment profile.

As adoption accelerates, tokenized MMFs offer treasurers an opportunity to improve liquidity access, optimise collateral usage and prepare their treasury functions for a more real‑time financial ecosystem. This article examines the advantages and the manageable considerations associated with tokenized MMFs.

Evolution vs disruption

Tokenized MMFs retain the same core objectives as traditional MMFs: capital preservation, liquidity and competitive short‑term yield through investment in high‑quality, short‑dated instruments. The innovation lies in the operating model. Ownership is recorded digitally and transactions settle on blockchain infrastructure, rather than through traditional registrars and payment rails.

For corporate treasurers, this represents an incremental upgrade rather than a wholesale shift. Existing investment policies, risk frameworks and governance structures remain largely intact, while operational efficiency improves.

Key benefits

For corporate treasurers, the operational advantages of tokenized MMFs translate into tangible benefits across the treasury function. By leveraging blockchain infrastructure while maintaining the proven risk characteristics of traditional MMFs, treasurers gain access to capabilities that directly address common pain points in liquidity management. The following benefits demonstrate how tokenization enhances day‑to‑day operations and strategic treasury positioning:

  • Faster settlement and continuous liquidity: conventional MMF transactions are often constrained by cut‑off times, batch processing and time‑zone differences. Tokenized MMFs shorten settlement cycles significantly, in some cases enabling near real‑time access to cash. This allows treasurers to access liquidity intraday, supporting urgent funding needs and improving cash forecasts; operate around the clock, independent of market hours; and reduce idle cash buffers, deploying liquidity more efficiently without compromising access.
  • Enhanced collateral efficiency: tokenized MMFs are particularly well suited to collateral management. Digital ownership enables rapid transfer and reuse, which is increasingly valuable in both traditional and digital markets. The benefits include near‑instant collateral movement (improving responsiveness to margin calls), programmability via smart contracts (enabling automated interest accruals and collateral substitutions), and improved collateral velocity (supporting better working capital optimisation).
  • Transparency and operational streamlining: blockchain technology provides a shared, immutable ledger of transactions and ownership. For treasury teams, this delivers real‑time visibility into holdings and transactions, reduced reconciliation and manual processing that lowers operational risk, and improved auditability, supporting compliance and internal controls.
  • Strategic optionality: tokenized MMFs can interact with digital asset infrastructure, including permissioned decentralised finance (DeFi) environments. While not essential for initial adoption, this creates future optionality for treasurers exploring innovative liquidity or funding solutions.

Considerations

While the benefits are compelling, corporate treasurers should remain mindful of several considerations. These are not structural weaknesses of tokenized MMFs, but areas requiring thoughtful planning and governance:

  • Evolving regulatory frameworks: although momentum is positive, regulatory approaches to tokenized securities and digital assets continue to develop across jurisdictions. Treasurers should ensure they understand local requirements related to custody, reporting and cross‑border transactions.
  • Technology and integration requirements: tokenized MMFs require digital wallets and connectivity to blockchain platforms. While many providers now offer institutional‑grade solutions, treasury teams may need to coordinate with IT and treasury system vendors to ensure smooth integration.
  • Operational and skills adjustment: treasury teams may need to develop familiarity with new concepts such as wallet management and smart‑contract‑enabled processes. This typically represents an extension of existing controls rather than a complete operational overhaul.
  • Security and confidentiality considerations: managing digital assets introduces new operational risks, particularly around private key management. Additionally, public blockchain environments offer transparency that may not suit all organisations, although permissioned or private networks can address this concern.
  • Market scale and liquidity depth: tokenized MMFs currently represent a relatively small portion of the overall MMF market. While participation by major financial institutions is driving growth, treasurers should consider product depth and liquidity when determining allocation size.

Practical steps

As with any innovation in treasury management, the successful adoption of tokenized MMFs depends less on the technology itself and more on how thoughtfully it is implemented. For corporate treasurers, the objective is not to adopt tokenization for its own sake, but to identify practical use cases that align with existing liquidity strategies, risk frameworks and governance standards.

The following steps provide a structured, pragmatic approach to evaluating and implementing tokenized MMFs, allowing treasurers to capture their benefits while maintaining control, resilience and regulatory compliance.

  • Evaluate strategic use cases: identify where faster settlement, real‑time liquidity or improved collateral efficiency could deliver the most value to your organisation.
  • Engage with established providers: work with asset managers, custodians and technology partners that have proven experience supporting corporate clients.
  • Strengthen governance frameworks: update policies covering digital asset custody, transaction authorisation and operational controls to accommodate new processes.
  • Pilot before scaling: a measured pilot allows treasury teams to test workflows, assess risks and build internal confidence before broader rollout.
  • Monitor market and regulatory developments: stay informed as standards, regulations and product offerings mature.

Tokenized money market funds represent a meaningful advancement in corporate liquidity management, combining the stability and familiarity of traditional MMFs with the speed, transparency and flexibility of blockchain technology to deliver clear operational and strategic benefits.

While some considerations remain particularly around regulation, technology and market maturity, these are increasingly well understood and manageable. For corporate treasurers willing to engage thoughtfully and adopt incrementally, tokenized MMFs offer a practical way to enhance liquidity efficiency today while positioning treasury operations for tomorrow.

As financial markets continue their shift towards real‑time digital infrastructure, tokenized MMFs are poised to become an important component of the modern corporate treasury toolkit.

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