In this article
Welcome to the world of corporate finance
Whether you like finance, markets, and managing risk, or you want a well-paid, specialised corporate finance career, this guide covers what a treasury specialist actually does, the skills, the day-to-day, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
A treasury specialist manages an organisation's cash, liquidity, funding, and financial risk. In simple terms: they manage the money, liquidity, and financial risk. Think of them as the guardians of cash and risk.
- Manage cash and liquidity
- Handle funding and investments
- Manage financial risk (FX, rates)
- Keep the organisation financially healthy
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- Analytical mind โ treasury is data and markets
- Numeracy โ comfort with money and risk
- Attention to detail โ precision with cash
- Commercial sense โ money serving the business
- Risk awareness โ protecting against swings
- Communication โ with banks and leadership
Education & qualifications
Treasury roles usually require a degree (finance, accounting, or economics) plus treasury or finance qualifications โ a specialised corporate finance route.
Typical responsibilities
- Cash โ managing liquidity
- Funding โ raising and investing
- Risk โ FX and interest rates
- Markets โ working with finance
- Forecasting โ cash needs
- Banking โ managing relationships
Responsibilities by seniority
Analyst / Junior
0โ3 years
- Supports treasury
- Manages cash
- Learns markets
- Building expertise
- Toward owning treasury
Treasury Specialist
3โ8 years
- Manages cash and risk
- Handles funding
- Owns analysis
- Trusted specialist
- Specialising
Senior / Treasury Manager
8+ years
- Leads treasury
- Manages risk strategy
- Advises leadership
- Manages a team
- Toward leadership
Where treasury specialists work
๐ข Corporates
Company treasury.
๐ฆ Banks
Banking treasury.
๐ Multinationals
Global cash and FX.
๐ญ Industry
Corporate finance.
๐ผ Financial services
Treasury teams.
๐ค Consultancy
Treasury advisory.
A day in the life
Reviewing the cash position โ making sure the organisation has the liquidity it needs today and ahead.
Managing financial risk, hedging against currency or interest-rate swings.
Working on funding or investing surplus cash, optimising the organisation's money.
Forecasting cash needs and managing banking relationships, the strategic side of treasury.
Cash managed, risk controlled, the organisation financially healthy. Guarding the money. That's the job.
What this job gives you
- Well-paid, specialised
- Finance and markets
- In-demand expertise
- Strategic and analytical
- Clear progression
Pros & cons
โ Advantages
- Well-paid, specialised
- Finance and markets
- In-demand expertise
- Strategic and analytical
- Clear progression
- Office-based and stable
- Transferable across sectors
โ Disadvantages
- Detail- and data-heavy
- High responsibility for cash
- Market and risk pressure
- Compliance-heavy
- Can be desk-bound
- Demanding qualification
Salary potential โ global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ โ = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Senior Treasury Specialist โ manage complex treasury
- Treasury Manager โ lead treasury
- Head of Treasury โ own treasury strategy
- Risk Manager โ financial risk
- Finance / FP&A โ broaden into finance
- CFO track โ senior finance leadership
Treasury Specialist vs related roles
Here's how some neighbouring roles compare.
| Role | Core focus | Note | Pay | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Treasury Specialist You are here | Manages cash and financial risk | Treasury, markets, risk | Baseline | Hard |
| Financial Controller | Owns accounting and control | Accounting, control | Higher | Hard |
| Accountant | Records financial position | Accounting | Lower-similar | Medium |
| CFO | Leads company finance | Finance leadership | Higher | Hard |
| Financial Advisor | Plans personal finances | Planning, advice | Lower-similar | Medium |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market and seniority.
Future outlook
Every organisation needs its cash and financial risk managed, and as markets grow more volatile, skilled treasury specialists who can protect and optimise money are in steady demand.
- Every organisation manages cash
- Market volatility raises risk's importance
- Global business needs FX management
- Treasury is increasingly strategic
- Steady, well-paid demand
Fun facts ๐ค
Treasury specialists make sure an organisation always has the cash it needs.
They manage financial risk โ currency and interest-rate swings that can cost millions.
Much of the job is working with banks and financial markets.
It's a well-paid, specialised corporate finance career.
Treasury is a path toward senior finance leadership.
Myths about this role
"It's just accounting."
โ It's forward-looking cash, funding, markets, and risk โ distinct from accounting.
"It's not important."
โ Without treasury, an organisation can run out of cash even while profitable.
"Anyone in finance can do it."
โ It takes specialist treasury and markets knowledge.
"There's no career path."
โ It leads to treasury management and senior finance.
"It doesn't pay."
โ It's a well-paid, specialised finance role.
Is this job right for you?
โ Good fit if you...
- Like finance and markets
- Are analytical and numerate
- Enjoy managing risk
- Want well-paid, specialised work
- Are detail-focused
- Want clear progression
โ Maybe not for you if...
- You dislike detail and data
- You want creative work
- You dislike markets and risk
- You want a people-only role
- You dislike compliance
- You want a non-financial role
Specialised & well-paid
Treasury is a well-paid, specialised corporate finance career managing cash, liquidity, and financial risk, in steady demand as markets grow volatile, with a path to senior finance leadership.
โ Advantages
- Well-paid, specialised
- Finance and markets
- In-demand expertise
- Strategic and analytical
- Path to senior finance
โ Challenges
- Detail- and data-heavy
- High responsibility for cash
- Market and risk pressure
- Compliance-heavy
- Demanding qualification
How to get started
- Get a finance or economics degree the foundation for treasury.
- Learn cash and markets liquidity, FX, and risk.
- Get treasury qualifications specialist certifications.
- Build experience manage cash and risk.
- Advance treasury manager, head of treasury, or senior finance.
What to know before you start
- It's forward-looking cash and risk, not just accounting
- It blends analysis, markets, and risk
- Without it a profitable business can run out of cash
- It needs specialist treasury knowledge
- It's well-paid and in steady demand
- It leads to senior finance leadership
From the field
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job:
People think treasury is just accounting. It's completely different โ accounting looks at the past, I manage the future: making sure we always have the cash we need, raising funding, and protecting us from currency and interest-rate swings that could cost millions.
Treasury specialist ยท 7 years in
A business can be profitable on paper and still run out of cash โ that's where treasury matters. Managing liquidity, funding, and financial risk keeps the whole organisation healthy. It's specialised, strategic, and well paid.
Treasury manager ยท 11 years in
It's the markets-and-risk corner of corporate finance, which suits me. I work with banks, manage FX and interest-rate risk, and optimise the organisation's money. It's a clear path toward senior finance and even the CFO track.
Head of treasury ยท 14 years in