According to www.jpmorgan.com, 87% of organizations have some level of automation in their payments infrastructure, yet significant gaps remain in achieving real-time liquidity — a critical capability for global supply chain professionals managing cross-border working capital and intercompany settlements.
Liquidity reimagined: Visibility as a supply chain enabler
In today’s volatile economic environment — marked by persistent trade tensions and geopolitical risk — finance and treasury teams are prioritizing liquidity visibility across operating entities and currencies. Real-time liquidity enables a centralized, up-to-the-second view of cash positions, made possible by streamlining legal entities and bank accounts and integrating banking systems with Treasury Management Systems (TMS) or ERP software. This integration reduces manual processing — identified as the biggest pain point in payments infrastructure — and unlocks programmable automation for just-in-time cash deployment, such as automated sweeping.
Borderless liquidity and supply chain efficiency
A key implication for supply chain professionals is the emergence of borderless liquidity through virtual account structures. These enable internal cash flow management and foreign exchange optimization for intercompany trade settlement without physically moving funds between accounts or jurisdictions — thereby reducing FX friction, settlement delays, and reconciliation overhead. As supply chains grow more distributed and multi-tiered, this capability directly supports working capital resilience and faster response to demand volatility or disruption.
Fraud defense and AI-driven payment integrity
The advancement of AI is reshaping fraud prevention, introducing both new attack vectors and enhanced detection tools. For supply chain stakeholders, secure, seamless payment experiences are essential not only for B2C transactions but also for supplier onboarding, invoice verification, and dynamic discounting programs. According to the report, businesses aim to deliver personalized, frictionless payments while simultaneously strengthening security — a dual mandate that demands tighter alignment between procurement, finance, and IT teams.
Connected treasury and blockchain unlocking
Payments evolution is converging with connected treasury — an always-on, integrated architecture powered by programmable automation and blockchain technology. Blockchain is highlighted as unlocking new models for trade finance, provenance tracking, and smart-contract-based settlements. While not yet mainstream, early adopters are exploring its use for reducing disputes, accelerating dispute resolution cycles, and embedding compliance checks into payment workflows — all of which reduce supply chain friction and counterparty risk.
- 87% of organizations have some level of automation in payments infrastructure
- Real-time liquidity requires integration of banking with TMS or ERP systems
- Virtual account structures enable borderless liquidity for intercompany trade settlement
- Fraud defense is being transformed by AI, balancing security and user experience
- Blockchain is positioned to unlock programmable, compliant, and auditable payment flows
Source: www.jpmorgan.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










