Six layers between
a proposal and a transfer.
Treasury is the hardest part of autonomous governance. Most platforms get it wrong by letting governance decisions optimistically update balance state. We don't. Every spend passes through six gates before a single satoshi leaves.
A single view of every cent and every token.
| Account | Type | Balance | Pending |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mercury · Operating | USD | $89,341.22 | $2,200.00 |
| Coinbase Custody · SOL | Crypto | 142.84 ◎ | — |
| Coinbase Custody · USDC | Stable | $24,120.00 | — |
| Treasury Bills (3mo) | Fixed | $14,380.91 | — |
Direct relationships with banks that take DAO LLCs.
Software-native. API-first. Supports DAO LLCs with proper documentation. 1–3 day approval.
Multi-user access controls. Subaccounts that map 1:1 to Orgs treasuries.
Treasury yield on idle balances. Rev share with Orgs customers.
We maintain direct relationships with these three. Any Wyoming bank will also take a properly-documented DAO LLC — we've seen First Interstate, Jonah Bank, and Rocky Mountain Bank work for customers.
Self-custody by default, institutional where needed.
Self-custody (default)
Your treasury keys are held in an Arsenal vault (our credential broker), encrypted at rest and zeroized in memory after every use. We never have plaintext access. Hardware keys (YubiKey, Ledger) supported for founder-signed operations.
Institutional (opt-in)
For treasuries above $1M we strongly recommend Coinbase Custody or BitGo. Orgs integrates with both: proposals flow from our governance through to their signing infrastructure, with SOC 2 Type II and FDIC-equivalent insurance on deposits.