Corporate finance may be on the verge of a structural shift. Ripple President Monica Long has forecast that more than $1 trillion in digital assets could flow into corporate balance sheets by 2026, fundamentally reshaping how companies manage cash, liquidity, and cross-border payments.
According to Long, roughly half of the Fortune 500—about 250 companies—are expected to adopt crypto or blockchain-based financial tools within the next two years. What was once viewed as a speculative experiment is increasingly being positioned as treasury infrastructure, particularly for firms operating across multiple currencies and jurisdictions.
This projection comes as traditional treasury strategies face mounting pressure from inflation, currency volatility, and rising transaction costs. Digital assets, Long argues, offer programmable liquidity, near-instant settlement, and improved transparency—features increasingly attractive to multinational corporations.
Why Big Companies Are Moving On-Chain
In a recent post on X, Long emphasized that blockchain technology is steadily becoming embedded in modern finance. Rather than replacing existing systems overnight, crypto is being layered into them—starting with treasury operations.
She outlined several practical use cases driving adoption:
- Digital Asset Treasuries (DATs) for diversified balance sheets
- Tokenization of real-world assets to improve liquidity
- Cross-border settlements with lower fees and faster clearing
- Hedging tools against currency and payment risks
Long stressed that corporate interest is no longer driven by price speculation. Instead, companies are exploring crypto as a financial utility, particularly as regulation becomes clearer and institutional-grade infrastructure matures.
Supporting this trend, crypto exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are drawing sustained institutional capital. Bitcoin ETFs recently recorded $1.42 billion in net inflows in a single week, their strongest performance since October, signaling renewed confidence from asset managers and pension-linked investors.
Banks and legacy financial firms are also expanding custody, settlement, and tokenization services—reducing operational barriers for corporate adoption.
Stablecoins Could Unlock $700B in Idle Capital
Long also highlighted the expanding role of stablecoins, which she described as the next foundational layer of global finance. Unlike volatile cryptocurrencies, stablecoins are pegged to fiat currencies and increasingly backed by regulated reserves.
She pointed to emerging legislation, including the GENIUS Act in the United States, as a milestone that formally integrates stablecoins into the regulatory framework. Long described the move as effectively launching the “digital dollar era.”
Beyond payments, stablecoins could address a long-standing corporate challenge: idle liquidity. Long estimates that over $700 billion in “trapped working capital”—funds locked in slow settlement systems or restricted accounts—could be freed through tokenized cash and programmable money.
For corporations, that capital could be redeployed into growth, debt reduction, or shareholder returns, marking a profound shift in financial efficiency.


