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      What consequences does the ongoing polycrisis have for treasury departments? And which areas of action should be given particular attention in future to strengthen their resilience in a volatile market environment and ensure financial stability? Our latest white paper "Resilient Treasury" provides detailed answers. The publication is based on a survey of 360 treasury professionals.

      One thing is clear: the multi-layered constellation, characterised by geopolitical tensions, digital transformation and increasing regulatory requirements, among other things, presents treasury units in companies with complex tasks. The analysis of the survey provides remarkable insights into practice and sheds light on transformation processes and future success factors.

      Survey findings at a glance

      • Only 17 per cent of respondents stated that they had never experienced a crisis situation with consequences for their own activities. The majority said they had been affected by crisis situations once, twice or even three to five times in the past five years.
      • According to the participants, the most frequently cited significant crises in the recent past were the coronavirus pandemic (57 per cent), crisis-related developments in energy and procurement prices (48 per cent) and the effects of the interest rate turnaround and global supply bottlenecks (40 per cent each).
      • The greatest concerns of the treasury professionals surveyed in crisis situations were dwindling liquidity or the threat of insolvency, greater market price fluctuations and damage to the IT infrastructure.
      • "My treasury organisation is currently resilient to crises": 20 per cent of respondents agreed with this statement. A further 49 per cent at least "somewhat agreed". This indicates that the majority of respondents have a positive perception of their own resilience.
      •  Crisis-related process adjustments (64 per cent) were mentioned the most when it came to implemented changes. Most future measures are also planned in this area. Adjustments to strategic alignment (42 per cent) came in second place, followed by adjustments in the IT area (41 per cent).
      • Changes to liquidity management (63 per cent) are by far the most relevant concrete measure for overcoming the crisis. A total of 69 per cent of respondents say that specific measures already implemented have strengthened the resilience of their treasury unit. 20 per cent also gave the measures a neutral rating.

      • In the white paper, we analyse these and various other figures to determine the extent to which the following hypotheses actually apply:
      • Cash is king
      • Crisis management increases resilience
      • Types of crisis determine countermeasures
      • There is only limited learning from other industries
      • Company size does not say much about effectiveness
      • Centralisation increases resilience

      • We then set out a practical six-point action plan, what needs to be done now to future-proof treasury units. The categories at a glance:
      • Implement robust liquidity and risk management
      • Learn lessons from past crises
      • Drive the centralisation and optimisation of treasury operations
      • Invest in technology and IT security
      • Adapt to specific crisis types
      • Strengthen stakeholder relationships and effective communication
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      Welche Auswirkungen hat die Polykrise auf die Widerstandsfähigkeit von Treasury-Abteilungen? Wir ordnen Umfrageergebnisse und Handlungsfelder ein - Jetzt Whitepaper mit Sechs-Punkte-Plan herunterladen

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      Partner, Financial Services, Finance & Treasury Management

      KPMG AG Wirtschaftsprüfungsgesellschaft