A Smart-Contract-Driven Future: Corporate Strategy in the Era of Zero-Touch Accounting

Insight
Jan 14, 2026
  • Banking/Capital Markets
  • Technology Transformation
  • Supply Chain Management
1158607726

The business world is in a phase where the “vision” for accounting is being redefined. “Zero-touch accounting,” in which accounting no longer depends on manual intervention, is taking shape through the power of smart contracts (mechanisms for automatically executing contracts on the blockchain), and leading companies have begun transforming their operations through digitalization. While the spread of blockchain platform technology is still in its infancy, operational transformation through cooperation between banks and private companies is making steady progress. As leading companies reap the benefits of automation, those that are late to the party may see their competitiveness impaired.

This Insight looks at companies active on the global stage to explain the changes we expect to see going forward in accounting operations and the benefits of automation through smart contracts, then digs into the actions companies should take to enjoy those benefits for themselves.

About the Author

  • Takuya Watanabe

    Takuya Watanabe

    Director
  • Satoshi Shimmyo

    Satoshi Shimmyo

    Senior Manager
  • Rie Furukawa

    Rie Furukawa

    Manager
  • Ryo Nakamura

    Ryo Nakamura

    Senior Consultant

1 Tokenized Deposits and Stablecoins

Key to zero-touch accounting are two forms of digital money that work on the blockchain. Common to both is that they can be transferred and settled on the blockchain. Where they differ is their issuers and the networks on which they are used. Tokenized deposits are a digital representation of bank deposits that preserves their underlying legal nature. Because the issuers are banks and they circulate on permission-based networks operated by banks, they have high synergy with internal controls and ERP linking. Stablecoins, meanwhile, are digital money designed to mirror the value of a fiat currency. Their issuers are mainly private companies compliant with regulations. Stablecoins are distributed on public networks open to the public, so the range of parties they can connect to is broad. Advantages common to both are lower costs compared to traditional payments, greater speed, expanded range of deliverable destinations and transparency of transactions. Using smart contracts also enables the automation of conditional processing such as “immediate payment upon completion of acceptance,” “automatic transfer upon arrival of deadline day,” and “automatic price reduction upon delay.” This changes money into “data that works based on conditions.” This change of mindset is at the core of zero-touch accounting (see Figure 1).

Figure 1. Comparison of Tokenized Deposits and Stablecoins

Developments in Blockchain Payments

In addition to the mainstay of cross-border payments, the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (Swift), there are moves afoot among central banks and major banks to build payments platforms predicated on tokenized deposits/stablecoins. The decisive action behind these developments was the federal stablecoins act passed in the USA in July 2025 (the GENIUS Act: “Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act”). This act indicated a framework for stablecoin reserve assets, disclosure and oversight requirements, vastly reducing the systemic uncertainties around stablecoins. Clarification of systems in key currency nations can be seen as a strong driver of moves by banks, payment operators and major companies to “embark on implementation.” As of time of writing in September 2025, Swift has also put forward its own vision for a blockchain payment network. With participation from 16 countries and over 30 major banks, it has taken as its initial benchmark handling real-time payments 24-hours a day, 365 days a year. Such moves are not limited to the global stage, but also extend to domestic instant payments, regional or industry consortium-backed closed environments and corporate group closed networks.
In a previous Insight, “A Seismic Shift in Cross-Border Payments: Impacts on Relationships Between Companies and Banks,” we looked in detail at the transformation of existing infrastructure, so we encourage you to take a look to find out more.

The takeaways from these developments are clear. Going forward, as standards for payment rails move on chain (on the blockchain), platforms will go from being singular to multilinear. As adoption of blockchain payments advances, the “places where smart contracts run” will expand dramatically from global networks only to include local and closed networks.
(Reference)Swift introduces blockchain-based ledger | Swift

2 Smart Contracts Today: The Arrival of the Implementation Period

To reiterate, a smart contract is a “’digital promise’ coded on the blockchain that acts as a mechanism for automatically executing tasks once set conditions have been fulfilled.” Using smart contracts, it is possible to make operational events such as the completion of acceptance, the arrival of deadlines and contract violations into triggers for autonomously moving tokenized deposits or stablecoins, thus fully automating payments and verification (i.e., making them zero-touch). The period from 2016 to 2018 saw significant attention on the potential of this technology, with energetic efforts dedicated to trial projects across different regions. However, with overlapping operational limitations, including cross-border legal systems not being in place, the costs of connecting to existing systems and variability in processing performance and processing fees, commercial development was limited.

Realizing Social Implementation Through State-Led Platform Building: The Spreading Implementation of Stablecoins Act

A decisive factor driving the social implementation of smart contracts in recent years has been the advancing clarification of stablecoin systems across different regions. In other words, “who” can issue stablecoins “under what conditions,” “to whom” they can be offered and “by whom” they can be used within “what bounds,” and even the requirements surrounding their redemption, reserve assets and disclosure have all been defined as regulations. In particular, the GENIUS Act passed in the USA in July 2025, coupled with progress in the establishment of related systems, has accelerated the issuing and distribution of stablecoins and pushed automation predicated on smart contracts from the conceptualization phase to the implementation phase (see Figure 2).

Figure 2. Overview of Stablecoin Systems Across Different Regions

The Growing Commercial Employment and Trialing of Tokenized Deposits

While stablecoins required the design of new systems, tokenized deposits are, legally speaking, “deposits” in themselves, so they can be implemented using existing banking regulation rails. This means that the systemic barriers to tokenized deposits are relatively low. Large-scale trial projects centering on central banks and large banks have thus accumulated, resulting in a decent number of cases of projects reaching commercial operation (see Figure 3).
The establishment of stablecoin systems has also manifested demand for on-chain payments, which has further advanced the permeation through society of tokenized deposits. One advantage of tokenized deposits has been that they can combine the on-chain-specific values of reduced costs and immediacy with the peace of mind of bank rails. Going forward, deliberations over how to apply the technology through partnerships between issuer banks and operating companies are thus expected to further intensify.

Figure 3. Major Projects Utilizing Tokenized Deposits

Additionally, internal systems built centered on SAP have entered into phases of fundamental revision, occasioned by the ECC 6.0 maintenance end-of-life. The transition from legacy systems to modern platforms (SAP S/4 HANA®, SAP® Cloud ERP), rather than being a simple upgrade, is a good opportunity for companies to engage in zero-based redesigns of operational processes. In the context of such redesigns, we have seen moves by companies to consider the use of new payment rails such as on-chain payments and programmable payments (features that perform automatic payments according to rules and conditions designed in advance).

3 A Near-Zero-Touch Future for Accounting Operations

After digital money spreads widely throughout society and the automation value of smart contracts is recognized, the next thing to come into view will be a world where accounting operations are almost fully automated, with near-zero human touch. While traditional BPO and RPA have been effective for rote internal work, exceptional processing, verification and internal controls remained dependent on manual work. By contrast, smart contracts are able to convert transaction conditions to code and automatically execute transactions spanning different companies. By involving business partners and banks, and using smart contracts to handle everything up to receipt and acceptance, payments, deposits and storage of audit trails, companies can convert non-value added work such as manual data entry, double checking and manual reconciliation to zero-touch processes. As a result, they can manage to, at once, condense closing procedures, limit accounting errors and improve internal controls.

Below, we go over some post-automation accounting operations (payments and deposits) as well as the specific processing steps involved.

Converting Traditional Payments Operations to Zero-Touch by Conducting “Instantaneous Payments upon Completion of Acceptance”

Traditional payments operations involve receiving an invoice (paper or electronic) after completion of acceptance, then sending the necessary documents to accounting. Accounting would then issue and sum a payment slip after performing three-way matching and approving the invoice. Despite this managing to avoid neither human work nor waiting times, a risk of accounting errors would nevertheless remain. With smart contracts, however, it is possible to encode, in advance, rules such as “instantaneous payment upon completion of acceptance.” Once an ERP confirms completion of acceptance, it notifies an on-chain blockchain via API, which then automatically performs a payment as soon as it has passed through conditional judgments, without the intervention of any humans. Smart contracts can also embed logic in line with a company’s business customs, for example, automatically lowering payment amounts when delays to acceptance occur. Automatic journalizing of transactions can also be registered to ERPs with the completion of payments as a trigger. Because transaction records are stored on the blockchain in forms that are difficult to forge, this process thus automates everything up to the storage of audit trails (see Figure 4).

Figure 4. Comparison of Traditional and Smart Contract Approaches (Payments)

Turning Deposit Operations from “Waiting” and “Verifying” Work into a Mechanism that “Flows Automatically”

We can also chart a zero-touch future for deposit operations. Traditionally, companies would await deposits after issuing invoices, then matching and reconcile bank statements and ERPs manually. If delays or defects occurred, the company would have to send reminders, calculate delay fees and adjust differences, inflating the work and lead times involved. With smart contracts, however, invoices can be issued as invoice tokens, and amounts, deadlines, discount/delay conditions, allowances and deposit conditions for receivers and other parties can be embedded on chain. Deposits are only received if they pass through token decisions, and transfers that do not match those conditions are automatically held or rejected. The result of this is that deposits are confirmed when conditions are met, accounts receivable are automatically reconciled and journal entry registration is completed without manual intervention. Likewise, on the payer side, the transaction status transitions are recorded on the blockchain in forms that are difficult to forge, serving as an audit trail as is. This changes deposit operations from “waiting” and “verifying” work to a mechanism that “flows automatically when conditions are arranged.” People only need to intervene in exceptional circumstances and day-to-day deposit reconciliation becomes unnecessary (see Figure 5).

Figure 5. Comparison of Traditional and Smart Contract Approaches (Deposits)

4 A Cutting-Edge Case Study and Its Outcomes

Some leading companies have already begun practicing zero-touch accounting. In this section, we will go over one case study in which a company adopted condition-driven automation of payment operations using a blockchain platform offered by a bank.

Siemens AG×J.P. Morgan: Introducing Programmable Payments

Major German company Siemens introduced programmable payments in partnership with JP Morgan. The company began trialing the project in 2021 and executed its first payment on November 6, 2023. The blockchain platform employed was JP Morgan’s Kinexys, and the means of payment was the same bank’s Blockchain Deposit Account (a mechanism that enables the transfer of deposit bonds on chain). Siemens set If-This-Then-That (IFTTT) rules in advance on the online treasury portal offered by JP Morgan and automatically executed payments 24 hours a day 365 days a year using contract execution events such as deliveries and acceptance as triggers. Siemens was also able to automate the transfer of funds via automatic bank transfer of necessary amounts from parent accounts whenever balances fell below a threshold. This greatly reduced the rote work performed by staff such as deadline management, ordering bank transfers and transferring balances, and resulted in the realization of secure, real-time payment operations. Below is a sample of the IFTTT rules implemented using smart contracts (see Figure 6).

Figure 6. A Sample Smart Contract

(Reference) Application-of-Programmability-to-Commercial-Banking-and-Payments.pdf

Using smart contracts enables real-time, automatic execution, unconstrained by differences in business hours between banks or the working hours of accountants. Achieving optimization of payment timings spanning national borders through automation also greatly reduces the risk of payments being delayed. On the capital side, this lessens the need for accumulating excessive reserve funds and cuts down on individualized work monitoring and transferring balances day to day. This limited fund accumulation globally and improved working capital efficiency. It also minimized human error in inputting and transferring accounting data by automating execution on a rules basis, reducing revision costs such as investigations and corrections after the fact.

While the number of companies that have introduced programmable payments has not been disclosed, in 2023, major US company FedEx announced plans to introduce the technology. Subsequently, India’‘s Axis Bank and the Qatar National Bank announced that they would be connecting to JP Morgan’s blockchain platform Kinexys. As of November 2024, Kinexys’‘ cumulative transfers executed was reported to have reached some 1.5 trillion USD, with the expansion of the payment network proceeding steadily.
(Reference)
JPM Coin launches programmable payments
Axis Bank Launches 24/7 USD Clearing with Kinexys | J.P. Morgan
Kinexys Blockchain Flourishes in MENA Region | J.P. Morgan
Introducing Kinexys | J.P. Morgan

5 Conclusion

This Insight described growing blockchain payment networks and the automatic execution of the smart contracts that run on them. It also pointed the way towards a vision for next-generation accounting that companies should aspire to, based on the insights ABeam Consulting has gained from supporting financial institutions and global companies in this area.
The advantages of smart contracts compared to traditional methods are clear. They extend the borders of automation from inside companies to outside companies (to banks and business partners), move in the direction of 24-hour 365-day-a-year execution, and minimize human error through rule-based automation. This results in the optimization of the flow of capital and allows companies to redistribute accounting resources to higher value-added work. Put another way, overlooking these trends could lead companies to trail behind their competition for years to come. Streamlining the back office has now gone from being a matter of simple cost cutting to being a core business challenge affecting growth and capital efficiency. Now is the time for companies to define their visions for their accounting departments and set out on implementing them.

Selecting which blockchain payment networks to connect to is also part of strategy. For example, the scope of automation that may be achievable could differ between the sorts of large-scale, highly public chains envisaged by Swift and the small-scale chains backed by regional or industry consortiums. The former have limited functionality but greater reach due to coordinating a wide range of interests. The latter can more readily adopt highly agile compositions in line with participant requirements. At time of writing, the extent to which programmable mechanisms can be implemented on large-scale chains is to be determined. The requirements demanded by zero-touch accounting, meanwhile, are more readily incorporated on the small-scale chains offered by commercial banks or stablecoin issuers. Deciding policy regarding what to automate using which chains in light of the company’s vision will be the deciding factor in future competition.

ABeam Consulting has a wealth of experience in cross-border fund management and DX support for domestic and international financial institutions and operating companies, having led implementation projects from both the bank and company perspectives. We also boast deep relationships with ERP vendors, which are key to connecting to blockchains, and an extensive record of achievement in partnerships with such companies. ABeam offers a platform providing end-to-end, side-by-side support from scope design to deploying to production.
If you are thinking about connecting to blockchain payment networks or implementing zero-touch accounting, please feel free to get in touch with us for a consultation.


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