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FX & Treasury

How to hold USD as a global business in 2026

MI
Maya Iyer
Published Jun 24, 2026 · 6 min read

For a business that earns, spends or raises money across borders, the currency you hold your cash in is a decision, not a default. Increasingly, that decision is landing on the US dollar. It is the currency most of your suppliers quote in, the one your investors wired, and the one that holds its value while local currencies drift. This guide explains why a global business would hold USD, how the underlying deposit protection actually works, and the practical steps to open a US dollar account without relocating or hiring a treasury team.

The problem with holding only local currency

If all of your operating cash sits in a currency that depreciates against the dollar, you are quietly losing purchasing power every month, even when your bank balance looks flat. A runway of 18 months on paper can shrink to 12 in real, import-adjusted terms after a sharp devaluation. For companies that buy cloud services, hardware, inventory or contractor time priced in USD, that gap shows up directly in the cost of doing business.

The second problem is speed. Cross-border transfers still often travel through correspondent banking, where a single payment can hop across two or three intermediary banks before it settles. Each hop adds a fee, a cut-off time and a point of failure. A supplier payment sent on a Friday can sit in transit until the middle of the following week, with limited visibility into where it is. When your counterparties expect dollars and expect them quickly, that latency becomes a commercial disadvantage.

Holding USD is less about betting on the dollar and more about matching the currency of your cash to the currency of your obligations.

What a USD account actually gives you

A dedicated US dollar account gives your business a stable unit to hold reserves in and a faster path to pay and get paid in the currency the rest of the world defaults to. In practice, the benefits cluster into a few areas:

The account is not a place to chase yield or speculate. It is operational infrastructure: a home for the dollars you already earn or raise, and a launchpad for the dollars you need to send.

How deposit protection works, accurately

This is the part most explainers get wrong, so it is worth being precise. HitchPay is a financial technology company, not a bank. When you hold a USD balance with HitchPay, those funds are placed with FDIC-member partner banks rather than sitting on HitchPay's own balance sheet. Deposit insurance is provided by the banks that actually hold the money.

What "pass-through" insurance means

Because the funds are held at insured partner banks, they can be eligible for FDIC insurance on a pass-through basis, the coverage flows through to you as the underlying owner, up to applicable limits, provided the account records identify you and the relationship is documented correctly. The standard FDIC limit is $250,000 per depositor, per insured bank, per ownership category.

Some providers extend effective coverage well beyond $250,000 by spreading balances across a network of partner banks (often called a sweep network), so that a portion of your deposit sits at each bank and each portion is separately eligible for insurance. This does not change the underlying rules, it simply uses more insured banks. Two things are always worth confirming before you rely on it:

Tip: Ask any provider three questions in writing, which banks hold my money, what is the insured limit per bank, and are the funds held in a custodial or "for benefit of" structure? Clear answers are a good sign; vague ones are a reason to keep looking.

FX best practices once you hold USD

Holding dollars solves the storage problem, but you still convert in and out of local currency to run the business. A few disciplined habits keep those conversions from eroding the value you set out to protect.

Convert on your schedule, not the market's panic

Avoid converting large sums reactively during a spike in volatility. Where your cash-flow timing allows, break conversions into planned tranches so you average across rates rather than gambling on a single moment.

Watch the spread, not just the fee

A "zero-fee" conversion can still be expensive if the exchange rate is marked up. Compare the rate you are offered against the mid-market (interbank) rate, the true cost of a conversion is the fee plus that spread combined.

Match currency to obligation

Keep enough in USD to cover known dollar liabilities, subscriptions, imports, debt, and keep local currency for local payroll and taxes. Converting only what you need, when you need it, minimises round-trip losses.

How to open a USD account: a short checklist

Opening a business USD account through a modern platform is closer to a software sign-up than a bank appointment. The typical path looks like this:

Ready to hold USD the right way? Open a multi-currency account with HitchPay and receive dollars with local US account details, convert at transparent rates, and hold balances with FDIC-member partner banks.

Open an account

Holding USD will not fix a flawed business, but for companies operating across borders it removes a persistent, avoidable drag, the slow leak of value and time that comes from mismatched currencies and legacy banking rails. Get the structure right, understand exactly how your deposits are protected, and treat FX as a discipline rather than an afterthought, and the dollar becomes what it should be: a stable foundation you build on, not a variable you worry about.

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