Recent action from The Clearing House to increase the transaction limit on real-time payments from $1 million to $10 million is fueling new use cases in business-to-business payments among Bank of America clients. The bank is one of the first financial institutions to enable its corporate customers to send payments up to the new transaction limit. As one of the owners of The Clearing House, Bank of America played a significant role in developing the RTP® network in consultation with peer banks, technology firms and the U.S. Federal Reserve. “Our clients have been using RTP to pay vendors, employees and customers, but the larger cap has opened up use cases for different kinds of transactions, such as real estate and deal closings and other corporate activity,” said AJ McCray, head of Global Payments Products, Global Payments Solutions (GPS) at Bank of America. In the first six weeks since the transaction limit was raised, BofA corporate clients have increasingly taken advantage of the limit increase, with transactions over $1 million now accounting for more than half the value of all U.S. real-time payments the company is processing. “The instant nature of real-time payments is a huge advantage for optimizing working capital and cashflow,” said Jay Davenport co-head of GPS Global Corporate Sales at Bank of America. “RTP payments embody some of the most commonly requested features from our customers – convenience, transparency and resiliency.”