WealthKernel Partners With Round Treasury to Transform Banking and Treasury Management for Businesses

  • Treasury
  • 21.03.2025 07:15 am

WealthKernel, a digital investing infrastructure provider, today announces a new partnership with Round Treasury, a banking and treasury platform that aims to simplify and help businesses manage their treasury and cash.

Managing cash flow remains a challenge for founders, as traditional banking solutions are typically not user-friendly and often require multiple accounts, manual transfers, and provide low interest rates. Over half of UK finance leaders say manual treasury work keeps them from mission-critical tasks, and with economic uncertainty in 2025, having real control of their cash is more important than ever.

Round aims to change this by automating treasury and banking, making money market funds accessible, sweeping funds across 30+ banks for better rates and protection, and removing all the manual work - enabling founders to focus on growth, not banking.

With WealthKernel’s Appointed Representative service, Round was able to bring its solution to the market. Additionally, Round also uses WealthKernel’s custody, brokerage and GIA to bring highly liquid money market funds to its clients and offer competitive yields at low risk.

The partnership further empowers Round to provide an automated treasury platform that integrates connected banking and a simple and compliant way to manage startup finances.

Karan Shanmugarajah, CEO of WealthKernel, says,
“With the challenges SMBs and startups face in the current economic climate, it is essential for businesses to have the right tools for managing treasury and finances. With the help of our API-first tech stack, we are helping Round enable companies to manage liquidity and cash flow more effectively. ”

Pac O'Shea, CEO and Co-Founder of Round Treasury, says,
“Startups shouldn’t have to choose between trust and usability when managing their cash. With WealthKernel’s infrastructure, we’re making it seamless for founders to access institutional-grade money market funds.”

Related News