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multivaluta

Multivaluta, or multi-currency, describes the ability of financial systems to manage more than one currency. It is used in retail banks, corporate treasury, payment platforms, and fintech applications to hold, transfer, and settle funds in different currencies. A multivaluta arrangement can include multi-currency bank accounts, prepaid cards, or digital wallets that support several currencies.

In practice, customers may receive payments in foreign currencies, hold balances in multiple currencies, and convert

Advantages include reduced FX exposure, simplified cross-border transactions, and the ability to price goods and pay

Common use cases include international payroll and vendor payments, cross-border e-commerce, travelers and expatriates, and global

Regulation: multi-currency accounts and platforms are subject to financial supervision, anti-money laundering, know-your-customer standards, and tax

between
currencies
at
the
time
of
payment
or
on
demand.
Exchange
rates
can
be
live
or
set
at
a
specific
time;
fees
may
include
spreads,
fixed
charges,
and
conversion
fees.
suppliers
in
their
local
currency.
Drawbacks
include
currency
risk
if
balances
are
held
without
hedging,
higher
costs
from
conversions,
and
regulatory
or
tax
reporting
complexity.
freelancing.
For
businesses,
treasury
management
may
integrate
with
accounting
and
ERP
systems
to
track
currency
positions,
perform
hedging,
and
monitor
risk.
reporting,
with
rules
varying
by
jurisdiction.