
GTreasury Launches GSmart AI, an Agentic AI FinTech Solution Built for CFOs and Complex Treasury Environments
GTreasury has introduced GSmart AI, a cutting-edge tool in the realm of AI-powered treasury solutions, aimed at revolutionizing how CFOs and finance teams manage complex treasury operations. Leveraging best-in-class AI enterprise infrastructure, governance, and agent-driven workflows, GSmart AI empowers CFOs and treasurers to confidently navigate the increasingly complex treasury landscape by providing secure, actionable insights and agentic actions to amplify the value of GTreasury's solutions, spanning connectivity, liquidity management, cash forecasting, payments, risk, netting, and other core treasury functions.
CFOs and treasury teams face an evolving mix of complex data, unpredictable market conditions, and increasing regulatory pressure. Reliable AI support is a strategic necessity, and GTreasury's GSmart AI addresses these demands with powerful capabilities, built-in compliance, and full transparency into every action it takes.
'For AI to create real value for CFOs, it has to be based on clear design principles of security, removing inefficiencies, fast problem solving, and quick delivery,' said Renaat Ver Eecke, Chief Executive Officer, GTreasury. 'GSmart AI, born from our recent investment in our Development Hub in Dublin, Ireland , amplifies our solutions, empowering CFOs and treasury teams to confidently take advantage of powerful insights and value without sacrificing compliance or oversight. We're proud of our recent investment and expansion in development, which advances our vision of adaptable solutions that provide financial leaders with the clarity to act.'
The value of GSmart AI lies in its adaptable and scalable capabilities, where AI actively reduces manual effort by performing routine-but-time-consuming treasury tasks, proactively identifying risks and variances, and recommending strategic actions to support more informed decision-making. Its flexible architecture empowers treasury teams to deploy and schedule AI agents tailored to specific operational needs, ensuring maximum adaptability and relevance. As CFOs face growing complexity in financial ecosystems, AI-powered treasury solutions like gSmart AI offer real-time insights and automated recommendations.
'With GSmart AI, we've built an enterprise-class AI platform that not only analyzes data but actively infers, reasons, and acts on behalf of treasury professionals, amplifying the value of our solutions,' said Mark Johnson, Chief Product Officer, GTreasury. 'GSmart AI provides CFOs and treasurers full visibility and control, with clear traceability of every AI-generated output back to its source data. The depth of governance and explainability embedded into GSmart AI distinctly set our platform apart from generalized AI solutions or any other treasury technology.'
GSmart AI's differentiated value includes full alignment with ISO/IEC 42001 and ISO/IEC 27001 standards, readiness for the upcoming EU AI Act, and stringent data sovereignty practices. The platform strictly isolates client data, ensures no client data is used in AI model training, and maintains complete transparency through comprehensive audit logs and observability tools. This innovation marks a significant leap in the evolution of AI-powered treasury solutions, offering real-time forecasting and adaptive decision-making tools.
Among the key features and benefits of GSmart AI: Enterprise-class infrastructure: A scalable, API-driven agentic platform designed specifically for the complex needs of treasury and finance. Security and compliance: Comprehensive encryption, zero-trust architecture, data residency controls, and rigorous global regulatory compliance including GDPR and CCPA. Complete transparency and auditability: Full visibility into AI operations with explainable outputs linked directly to source documentation, backed by automated security monitoring and audit logging. Client control and data sovereignty: Full user control over AI features through feature flags, explicit opt-in workflows, and strict client-specific data isolation.
GSmart AI integrates seamlessly within GTreasury's adaptable treasury management platform, providing flexible and intuitive interaction with existing solutions and workflows. With the rise of AI-powered treasury solutions, finance leaders now have access to tools that adapt and evolve alongside their needs.
To learn more about GSmart AI and request a demo, visit https://www.gtreasury.com/solutions/ai/treasury-ai-platform .
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Herald Scotland
43 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
Less than 3% of ScotRail services cancelled in 2024
A high water mark in 2022 saw 23,207 services cancelled, or 3.7% of all trains. Early figures in 2025 have also been positive, with only 2.2% of trains cancelled this year, as of 16 May. Mark Ilderton, ScotRail's Service Delivery Director, praised the findings. He told The Herald: 'Everyone across Scotland's Railway is working flat out for our customers to ensure our rail service is a safe, reliable, and green form of public transport. 'We operate more than 2,100 services every day, with around nine out of ten of those services meeting the punctuality target, getting customers to where they need to be. 'Cancellations can be for a number of reasons, many of them outside the control of ScotRail, but represented around two per cent of more than 650,000 services we operate across the country over the course of the year.' ScotRail trains were cancelled less than 3% of the time in 2024. (Image: Merseytravel) However, the number of public performance monitoring (PPM) failures has fluctuated in recent years. The figure increased slightly between 2022 and 2024, rising from 69,625 to 73,359. However, the overall failure percentage dropped from 11.2% to 10.7%. PPM tracks the publicity of train services, measuring the percentage of trains which arrive at their destination within five minutes for regional trains and ten minutes for long distance services. Ilderton said that while the trends were 'encouraging', there was more work to be done. He said: 'Our focus is building on the hard work of our people to deliver the safe and reliable railway that our customers expect and deserve, and to encourage more people to travel by train instead of using the car. 'And with more than nine out of ten customers satisfied with our service according to Transport Focus, the independent watchdog for transport users, it's testament to the hard work of ScotRail staff in delivering a safe, reliable, and green railway.' Read more from Josh Pizzuto-Pomaco: Rail station reopenings will lead to multi-million economic boost, quango says ScotRail 'one of UK's best for passenger satisfaction' ScotRail is 'fixing' AI train announcer after controversy over voice used The Herald's FOI request also queried the cost of ScotRail's AI announcement system, dubbed 'Iona'. The system sparked controversy after Scottish voiceover artist Gayanne Potter alleged tech firm Read Speaker used recordings of her voice to develop the software — without her permission. When asked to provide details on how much it cost to develop and implement the system, ScotRail declined, stating 'Iona' did not incur "development costs' as it was 'an off the shelf product'. Potter told the BBC: "I have to look on social media and see people mocking it, berating it. "They don't realise it's actually a real person who's been put through a dreadful voice app." Potter added: "It's hard enough for people in the creative industry to sustain careers but to be competing with a robotic version of yourself just adds insult to injury." First Minister John Swinney has told MSPs in Holyrood that ScotRail would be 'fixing' the software.


Powys County Times
5 hours ago
- Powys County Times
Creative industries to get £380m boost ahead of industrial strategy launch
Britain's film, music and video game industries are set to receive millions of pounds of investment as the Government seeks to ensure the UK's place as a creative superpower. The investment, announced by Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy, will see £380 million spent on a range of projects intended to double private investment in the creative industries. Ms Nandy said the investment would 'boost regional growth, stimulate private investment, and create thousands more high-quality jobs'. The figure includes £25 million for research into cutting-edge technologies such as the virtual avatars used in Abba Voyage, and £75 million to support the film industry. It will also see £30 million put towards backing start-up video games companies – an industry worth billions of pounds to the UK – and another £30 million for the music industry, including an increase in funding for grassroots venues. Another £150 million will be split between the mayors of Manchester, Liverpool, the West Midlands, West Yorkshire, the North East and the West of England to support creative businesses in their regions. The announcement comes as the Government prepares to publish its industrial strategy next week, billed as a 10-year, multibillion-pound plan to back certain sectors and secure growth for the UK economy. The creative industries are set to be one of the winners, with a plan for the sector expected to be published alongside the wider industrial strategy. Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds said: 'The UK's creative industries are world-leading and have a huge cultural impact globally, which is why we're championing them at home and abroad as a key growth sector in our modern industrial strategy.' But earlier this month, the Government also rejected a planning application for a major new film studio near Holyport, in Berkshire, over its impact on the green belt. The £380 million has been welcomed by the industry, with the Broadcasting, Entertainment, Communications and Theatre Union (Bectu) saying it was a 'show of commitment to the sector'. But Bectu chief Philippa Childs said creative workers would also be looking for 'sustained support' from the Government as the sector 'recovers from a series of external shocks'. Recent years have seen the sector rocked by Covid, the cost-of-living crisis and concerns about the impact of AI and Donald Trump's threat to impose tariffs on films made outside the US. Conservative shadow culture secretary Stuart Andrew accused Labour of threatening the 'very survival' of the creative industries. He said: 'From their national insurance jobs tax to their business rates hike, Labour are pushing creative businesses to the brink, and we now know that Rachel Reeves has a secret plan to raise taxes – meaning things will only get worse. 'Labour must recognise that their economic mismanagement is dealing a devasting blow to the sector.'


Auto Car
5 hours ago
- Auto Car
MWIC Bonus Episode 13: Autocar Meets car designer Julian Thomson, GM Advanced Design Europe
Close Julian Thomson is one of the world's best car designers and if you don't know the name, you'll know his cars. As Lotus's chief designer he designed the Elise and at Jaguar Land Rover created the LRX concept, which went on to become the Range Rover Evoque. But most of Thomson's career has been spent in advanced design and that's where he finds himself now, at General Motors' new advanced design centre Europe. Why does GM need a European design centre and what will it do? Join Steve Cropley and Matt Prior as they put these questions and many more to one of the world's most eminent car designers.