
Premier Liquidity Performance Event KyribaLive Showcases Treasury Leaders
This year's KyribaLive features a robust agenda of dynamic keynotes, technology demos, specialized breakout sessions, industry roundtables and CTP learning credit opportunities. With greater access to experts across process automation, AI analytics, risk management, working capital, bank integrations, and strategic treasury leadership, the event represents all facets of the Kyriba platform that empower thousands of customers to optimize their operations and cash flow.
Impactful Partnerships
Throughout the event, Kyriba partners will access the latest product offerings and training opportunities, be recognized for their achievements, and showcase their expertise in payments, treasury, FX, working capital and implementation.
'As Kyriba continues to build upon our exceptional success, partnerships are increasingly vital to our growth trajectory. We are acutely focused on strengthening our global and local alliances, as well as expanding technology partnerships, that can deliver mutually beneficial impact to our valued partners and customers,' said Andrea Delvo, Kyriba SVP, Partnerships & Alliances.
The Partner Summit will highlight new partnerships, expanded collaboration and enhanced offerings, including:
Morgan Money, a global trading platform developed by J.P. Morgan Asset Management. Morgan Money is now seamlessly available through Kyriba's API Marketplace, the largest in the treasury space. This integration leverages Kyriba's technology to provide their mutual customers with real-time investment workflows, demonstrating how API connectivity can help transform treasury and create tangible business value.
Amazon Web Services (AWS), which has recently certified Kyriba through the AWS Financial Service Industry (FSI) Competency program. Achieving this competency certification assures our customer and partner ecosystem that Kyriba has met the high AWS standards for performance, security, and high availability as an innovative fintech partner. Kyriba, a multi-tenant SaaS platform deployed on AWS, also transacts through AWS' marketplace.
Databricks, whose Data Intelligence Platform has been selected by Kyriba for its highly secure and flexible architecture, along with its strong commitment to open-source. Databricks has recently recognized Kyriba's innovative and open approach by welcoming Kyriba into its Built on Databricks partner ecosystem.
Kyriba's improved Partner Portal. Beginning this Spring with features rolling out through the end of the year, the Kyriba Partner Portal aims to expedite and enhance partner onboarding and experience. New features include: streamlined sign-on, training resources, case and certification management, access to Kyriba's DUST platform, product release information, and much more.
Impressive Achievements
Expanding its annual awards program to feature new categories and selection criteria, Kyriba also recognized the dedication and superior liquidity performance impact of its customers.
Among thousands of organizations, a selection of this year's honorees include:
Apollo named Enterprise Liquidity Transformation of the Year for embracing technology for the optimal transformation and efficiency of their treasury and finance departments.
Hartree Partners awarded Payments Innovator of the Year for their achievements in successfully centralizing and automating their treasury operations through Kyriba to support rapid growth, complex trading activities, and global expansion.
McCormick & Co named Working Capital Program of the Year in recognition of its optimized cash flow through the company's supply chain program. By standardizing AP and SCF on Kyriba's platform, McCormick automated invoice and payment workflows across multiple banks and 300+ suppliers, minimizing manual workflows, transforming treasury operations and positioning the company to roll out globally as they continue their global ERP upgrade.
Uber awarded FX Optimization of the Year for embracing Kyriba's FX module, and making great strides in managing FX exposure and risk. By automating data integration and optimizing hedging strategies, Uber has significantly reduced manual processes, enhanced financial stability, and set a new standard in global treasury excellence.
Kyriba's signature KyribaLive Exchange (KLX) event series will kick off this summer, with regional events slated in Tokyo, Singapore, Riyadh, Dubai, London, Paris, Zurich, Milan and Madrid. To learn more, visit: kyriba.com
About Kyriba
Kyriba is the global leader in liquidity performance, empowering CFOs, Treasurers and IT leaders to connect, protect, forecast and optimize their liquidity amid economic complexity. As a secure and scalable SaaS solution trusted by 3,000 customers, Kyriba delivers intelligence and financial automation through innovative technologies, bringing precision, efficiency, and insight to financial operations. With an expansive ecosystem of banking, technology and consulting partners, Kyriba's platform powers more than 3 billion bank transactions and $15 trillion in payments across 9,900+ banks annually – helping companies gain enterprise-wide visibility, ensure financial stability, and outperform their business strategy.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Insider
an hour ago
- Business Insider
Here's Why Some AI Startups Are Switching to Google Cloud from AWS (AMZN)
Alphabet's (GOOGL) Google Cloud is quickly becoming a serious competitor to Amazon's (AMZN) AWS in the race to support AI startups. One example, according to The Information, is The Browser Company, which was developing a new browser called Dia with advanced AI features. At first, the team considered using AWS, since it already powered other parts of Dia. However, after testing both options, The Browser Company found that Dia's AI tools ran faster and cost less on Google Cloud due to Google's in-house Gemini model. Despite generous financial incentives from AWS, the startup chose Google. Elevate Your Investing Strategy: Take advantage of TipRanks Premium at 50% off! Unlock powerful investing tools, advanced data, and expert analyst insights to help you invest with confidence. Make smarter investment decisions with TipRanks' Smart Investor Picks, delivered to your inbox every week. While AWS still makes more than double the revenue of Google Cloud and has long been the go-to provider for startups, Google has closed the gap by offering faster models, better developer tools, and easier account setups. Startups like Nectar Social and Pear Health Labs now rely on Google Cloud for tasks that require advanced reasoning, thanks to Gemini 2.5 Pro. Google has also gone a step further by connecting startups directly with DeepMind researchers. Interestingly, even OpenAI, which usually relies on Microsoft's (MSFT) Azure, has started using Google Cloud services. Nevertheless, AWS still has other major benefits, especially for startups that need a lot of computing power or custom infrastructure. Some companies, like Haize Labs and Leash Bio, switched from Google to AWS because it gave them better access to Nvidia (NVDA) chips, faster setup for custom APIs, and more flexibility with scaling. In fact, Haize Labs needed to quickly increase its computing capacity to meet demand from a large customer, and AWS delivered within weeks. Although Google is winning over startups with its strong AI models and simplified user experience, AWS remains the top choice for companies that need raw computing power and fast scaling. Which Cloud Stock Is the Better Buy? Turning to Wall Street, , although they are virtually tied. In fact, GOOGL's price target of $202.24 per share implies 11.4% upside versus AMZN's 11.3%.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Morgan Stanley Raises Amazon PT to $300 — Manageable Tariffs, Strong AI Outlook
Inc. (NASDAQ:) is a. On July 11, Morgan Stanley reiterated the stock as 'Buy' and raised its price target on the stock to $300 per share from $250. Amazon was reiterated as a top pick, with the firm stating that it sees a 'more manageable tariff and geopolitical backdrop.' It also lifted its 2026 and 2027 EPS forecasts by 9% and 6%. Analysts stated that they view Amazon Web Services as gaining speed again, owing to the growing contribution from AI startup Anthropic. This could bring in revenue of about $10 billion to $19 billion by 2027. Despite supply constraints, core cloud demand also remains strong. A CIO survey also revealed that AWS is gaining share from rivals. The firm now projects AWS revenue growth of 17% to 18% annually through 2026, with margins near 37%. 'Today, we are re-raising our estimates as we adjust for the more constructive macro landscape with lower tariffs.' Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) is an American technology company offering e-commerce, cloud computing, and other services, including digital streaming and artificial intelligence solutions. While we acknowledge the potential of AMZN as an investment, we believe certain AI stocks offer greater upside potential and carry less downside risk. If you're looking for an extremely undervalued AI stock that also stands to benefit significantly from Trump-era tariffs and the onshoring trend, see our free report on the best short-term AI stock. READ NEXT: and Disclosure: None. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Forbes
9 hours ago
- Forbes
Kiro Development Environment Is A Big Shift In AWS Developer Strategy
New Kiro projects can leverage vibe or spec-based coding. Over the past 12 months we have seen more activity in developer tools than in the previous 15 years. This is largely due to generative AI and its ability to automate application development at all levels. The innovation has been rampant, with AI usage evolving from coding assistants led by GitHub Copilot to next-gen vibe coding tools like Cursor and Windsurf (all, coincidentally, built on top of Microsoft's open source VSCode IDE). Interestingly, AWS has not gained much momentum among developers for its contributions to the AI development movement. And that's too bad, since AWS was the first company to adopt a multi-model strategy with its Bedrock API; it was one of the first to adopt MCP; and it even had agentic coding functionality before GitHub Copilot did, as I covered in May. Probably needless to say, the AWS team was frustrated by this; they recognized that maybe a new and more aggressive developer strategy was required. Which brings me to its new release — Kiro — which is arguably the biggest shift in developer strategy for AWS in years. (Note: AWS is an advisory client of my firm, Moor Insights & Strategy.) What Is Kiro? Kiro is a new IDE built upon a fork of VSCode and, like a lot of other IDEs, it's vibe-friendly. But that definition is too limited when we consider the grounding assumptions that led to the development of Kiro. Pre-release build of Kiro welcome screen Does The World Really Need Another IDE? I was approached in April to join a small group of non-AWS people to learn about and try Kiro before it went into preview mode. To be honest, my first reaction was 'Why do we need yet another IDE?' — and it took me a while to figure out my answer. After using Kiro and having further discussions with the team, I realized that Kiro does have a place and a perspective deserving of consideration from the enterprise. My rationale is as follows. When I speak with devs today about vibe coding, I hear two conclusions. First is that vibe is great for building demos and MVPs, but the technology and tools aren't yet robust enough for scalable production code. Second is that the leading tool vendors of the vibe movement are startups that may ultimately end up being acquired by companies without enterprise credentials. Clearly, AWS has the scale and enterprise experience to address both of those concerns. And AWS's experiences with AI development suggest that enterprise-grade vibe is a worthy and achievable goal. But the true mark of success will be enabling next-generation AI apps to be built with higher quality and bigger scale. Scale will come from better tools and access to services, which the Kiro team is suggesting they can achieve. Quality may require a different approach to vibe. When I met with the Kiro team, I complained about the overemphasis on a single developer working with basic prompts. High-quality applications that get real-world adoption are the product of many stakeholders that provide very solid requirements for building not just code but also test plans. The fact is that when considering an enterprise app, a developer needs a mountain of different artifacts to shape the work and the app itself. In other words, the idea of someone just whipping up an app in a vibe-fueled vacuum is out of step with reality. The team agreed, and that is why spec-driven development is more central to the Kiro experience. When you start a new folder, you can choose to work off of a spec or the prompt. And you can easily upload a wide range of artifacts to create the spec. I also was impressed with the Kiro team's take on using vibe to work with existing codebases. All too often, we see vibe in the light of starting at a Day 0 prompt, but again, in reality most developers spend most of their time working with code that is already established. Having its own IDE opens up the Kiro team to have a lot more influence on the overall experience. Kiro includes: new windows for agent development such as accessing MCP servers; Agent Hooks, which are triggers to invoke agents or code; and agent steering, which is a way to globally inject context and scope into agents. These types of features were not available when limited to the plug-in-only model. Or a different way to look at this is that Kiro may be a vibe-oriented AI IDE, but you can still do all of your other work on it the way you'd like — as opposed to using a suite of different tools for different projects. Kiro Has Real Potential There's a lot to like about Kiro, especially if you are an enterprise developer. Yes, other vibe tools have a lot of similar capabilities, but I think the combination of vibe's ease of use combined with enterprise-class services is powerful. That said, this is a preview product and, as I have written before, preview products are in preview for a reason. So, after a few hours of testing and meeting with the team, here's what I would like to see next from them. While I was initially skeptical, I am impressed by what I have seen so far with Kiro. I also am impressed that AWS was able to deeply consider where it wanted to go with developers and divorce itself from some long-held assumptions. There is a long path ahead, but I am excited to hear more about how Kiro matures and especially look forward to seeing what we learn at the AWS re:Invent show later this year.