The deal is designed to expand GTreasury’s platform to automate reconciliation and regulatory reporting across treasury, finance and compliance operations, according to a Tuesday (Jan. 6) news release.
“Today’s acquisition of Solvexia removes the boundaries between treasury management, reconciliation and compliance reporting,” GTreasury CEO Renaat Ver Eecke said in the release. “Organizations shouldn’t rely on manual processes that introduce fraud risk, disclosure weaknesses and audit exposure when automation can deliver near-perfect accuracy and complete transparency. The integration of GTreasury’s capabilities with Solvexia’s automation platform delivers unprecedented visibility and control across the entire finance function, protecting CFO reputation while ensuring governance and regulatory compliance.”
The companies’ combined platform offers “end-to-end reconciliation automation across payment gateways, banking systems, ERPs, and internal records” for fiat and digital asset transactions, the release said. This lets users identify fraudulent fund flows, spot revenue leaks and verify intercompany settlements.
The platform also includes “embedded governance and controls” that provide clarity to approval processes and lessen risk from manual, spreadsheet-driven workflows, per the release.
GTreasury, a treasury management systems supplier, was acquired by Ripple in October in a $1 billion deal. Terms of the Solveixa purchase were not released.
The mindset around treasury management has begun to shift, PYMNTS wrote last month. For most of its history, the enterprise treasury function has been taken at face value as operational, essential and for the most part, invisible. In 2025, however, that viewpoint began to shift.
“Looking ahead to 2026, treasury has come to sit at the center of the enterprise, increasingly indistinguishable from a real-time financial command center,” the report said. “Predictive cash forecasting, automated risk management, natural language queries and real-time intelligence have become table stakes as once-daily manual tasks like cash positioning start to move at machine speed.”
The forces guiding this evolution are globalization, volatility and digitization. Amid ongoing economic uncertainty and increasing complexity, “the evolution of treasury management is moving to the center of corporate strategy,” according to the report.
Meanwhile, the PYMNTS Intelligence report “Why Treasurers’ Influence Matters” found that treasurers with high levels of influence are more likely to report that their companies have predictable cash flows, expect revenue to increase and are agile in responding to shifting market conditions.