Money – Fintech & Payments · Editorial
By Moakanyi Magazine · Global Issue · June 2026
Treasury used to be where a company parked its cash and waited. In 2026 it became where a company decides whether it survives the next shock. The World Bank cut its global growth outlook and warned of a steeper drop if war fallout spreads – the kind of volatility that turns liquidity, currency and interest-rate management into strategic decisions rather than routine ones.
For Botswana firms exposed to the Pula, to US$-denominated trade and to import costs, that shift is direct. When growth forecasts fall and conflict risk rises, the timing of cash, the hedging of currency and the cost of debt stop being administrative details. They become the decisions that determine whether a firm has room to manoeuvre when conditions turn.
Why treasury moved to the boardroom
In stable times, treasury management can run quietly. In volatile times, the same functions – holding enough liquidity, managing currency exposure, controlling the cost of capital – carry strategic weight, because a misjudgement on any of them can constrain the whole business. A downgraded global outlook with named downside risks is exactly the condition that pulls treasury onto the board's agenda.
Volatility is what turns treasury from a ledger into a strategy.
For Botswana directors, the practical step is to treat treasury as a board-level matter: knowing the firm's liquidity buffer, its currency exposure and its sensitivity to interest rates before a shock, not after. The World Bank's caution is a signal that the volatility justifying that attention is unlikely to ease soon – and that the firms managing cash strategically will weather it better than those still treating it as routine.
For Botswana firms, board-level treasury is the cheapest insurance against a darkening outlook.
Sources: Reuters




