Investing

Approaches to Investing short-term cash in Corporate Treasury

Report date: 
22 Apr 2025

Commentary

Risk versus reward. 

Treasurers face this eternal trade-off directly when investing short term cash. There is pressure to increase earnings, and a constant search for new solutions, but the priorities remain, in order:

  1. Safety
  2. Liquidity
  3. Yield

Companies put a lot of effort into making money and bringing in cash: the potential downside to losing money outweighs any yield benefit risky investments may bring.

As always, there is a lot of complex detail, depending on the size, the cash balance and the culture of the company.

  • Most companies have a formal investment policy, often approved by the board.
  • One of the benefits of centralising cash is to avoid paying the bid/offer spread of having cash in one place, and debt in another. Several peers used notional pooling (BMG and JPMorgan were mentioned) to achieve this. Both banks offer deposits for the cash in the pool.
  • The most used instruments are bank deposits and MMFs (Money Market Funds). A few peers invest directly in high quality sovereign bonds, as well as repos. The rules can be more flexible in highly regulated countries, such as Turkey and Angola.
  • Some peers used bank deposits as a means of balancing wallet share with relationship banks, but most take advantage of the higher rates provided by MMFs.
  • Others left pools of cash in different countries and regions: in these cases, the short term investments were frequently managed by a team in central treasury.
  • One peer managing Latin America was pleased with the better yield offered by some currencies with higher nominal interest rates, though this was not a common approach. Most of the commonly used instruments are available in...

 

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Treasury & FX in Bangladesh, Pakistan & Sri Lanka

Report date: 
20 Jan 2023

Commentary

Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka – three countries with sizeable populations and even bigger economic and social problems. They are difficult places to do business at the best of times – but they have become even more problematic with recent world events, limiting tourism receipts in Sri Lanka and restricting the apparel export business in Bangladesh.

The themes across the three countries were remarkably consistent, though there are variations in the detail:

  • For all our participants, these are important markets, so they are staying there, even though it is very difficult to get currency out. However, one participant is in the process of divesting their entity in Pakistan.
  • FX has always been an issue in these countries, but it has got worse recently. However, the prospect of an IMF package has led to some improvement in Sri Lanka.
  • Officially, none of the countries has strict exchange control regulations, but in practice, they are restricting the outflows of hard currency by a series of administrative measures. Goods imports tend to be prioritised over services, royalties and dividends.
  • In Pakistan, central bank approval is required for all
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