Cash Management Non-Financial Institutions Survey 2021
This is the 20th annual survey of the world's cash management industry. With an average response base in excess of 30,000, this is the most authoritative and comprehensive ranking available.
USE THE BELOW FILTER TO VIEW RESULTS IN THE CATEGORY OF YOUR CHOICE
If a ranking does not show this is because it didn't meet the minimum threshold requirement.
The re-use/distribution of any of the rankings requires the express permission of Euromoney Insight – please contact insight@euromoney.com if you wish to discuss this further.
The Euromoney Cash Management Survey recognises the leading providers of cash management products and services. This year we collected 27,173 valid non-financial institution responses.
About the Cash Management Survey:
Euromoney’s Cash Management Survey receives responses from the leading cash managers, treasurers and financial officers worldwide, and is considered the benchmark survey for the global cash management industry. This is the most comprehensive guide to the cash management arena in the market
View Other transaction services Coverage
-
Transaction banks in Asia will have to up their game to satisfy corporates who now view a strong digital offering as a prerequisite to maintaining relationships.
-
The spectre of increased liability for financial officers looms large over the UK government’s plans to reform the audit profession.
-
As multinationals navigate the complexities of developing Asian businesses – amid supply-chain reconfigurations, the rise of sustainable financing and the penetration of e-commerce – treasurers are playing a bigger role in strategic decision-making.
-
After years of being off the table due to historically low interest rates, treasurers can now realistically look to profit from rate differentials between currencies.
-
Wholesale banking head Andrew Bester explains the renowned retail bank’s ambition to win new revenues building on its expertise in sustainable finance.
-
A report published by management consultancy Baringa at the end of May suggested that UK firms face the largest-ever increase in debt-driven costs between now and the end of 2026.
MORE INFORMATION
-
Survey and award schedule