How Oak & Anchor Insurance Group grew its book 35% without a new hire.
A real-world breakdown of operational delegation to AI agents for service work and local outreach.
Introduction
Corporate treasury management has evolved beyond basic cash preservation. Modern treasuries must actively optimize yield across diverse money market pools while preserving absolute security.
AI agents offer the capability to execute complex hedging and yield strategies, provided they are bound by strict cryptographic rules.
The Challenge
Allowing autonomous systems access to corporate vaults introduces severe security, key-leak, and counterparty risks.
Industry Pain Points
Traditional API keys give absolute authorization, exposing corporate funds to single-point compromise if the host server is breached.
Why Traditional Systems Fail
Multi-signature setups require manual human approval, creating delays that miss brief high-yield windows in overnight loan markets.
Secure autonomy is achieved by dividing private key shares across isolated enclaves using Multi-Party Computation (MPC).
Benefits
ProElevate secures treasury operations through threshold cryptography:
- Key Fragmentation: Key shares are generated and held in separate hardware enclaves.
- Silicon-Level Policies: Transfer rules (e.g. maximum asset moves) are compiled directly into the secure hardware rules.
- ZK Verifiable Auditing: Agents prove compliance with allocation risk models without disclosing the underlying asset balances.
Results
During a six-month deployment at a multi-national tech firm, ProElevate autonomous treasury systems recorded zero unauthorized movements while scaling yield operations:
| Metric | Manual Treasury Desk | ProElevate Autonomous Vault |
|---|---|---|
| Average Overnight Yield | 4.15% APY | 5.38% APY |
| Reallocation Delay | 4.5 Hours | 12 Seconds |
| Security Auditing Costs | $85k/Quarter | $0 (Self-generating cryptographic logs) |
Future Outlook
We foresee corporate vaults transforming into autonomous agents that directly negotiate credit lines and interest swap agreements with peer corporate treasuries.