This article is reprinted with permission from Bitpush, author: Seed.eth, copyright belongs to the original author.
In November 2025, Ripple Labs announced a new round of strategic financing amounting to $500 million, with the company's valuation soaring to $40 billion. This marks the first public fundraising for the cryptocurrency financial company in six years and the largest capital injection since the Series C financing in 2019.
More importantly, the capital factions behind this round of financing are extraordinary: Wall Street giants Fortress Investment Group and Citadel Securities led the round, joined by well-known institutions such as Pantera Capital, Galaxy Digital, Brevan Howard, and Marshall Wace.
For those who have heard of Ripple, this can be considered a "turnaround": Is this the same Ripple that was once mired in the SEC lawsuit and even regarded as a "zombie company"? From "storytelling expert" to "compliance disaster zone."
Ripple was founded in 2012 and is one of the oldest projects in the crypto space, with its core technology being the XRP Ledger, a decentralized ledger designed specifically for cross-border payments. Ripple Inc. relies on this to develop payment and settlement systems, and its token XRP was all the rage globally between 2017 and 2018, ranking among the top three in market capitalization, second only to Bitcoin and Ethereum.
However, as the price of the coin plummeted and the reality of "inflated" partnerships came to light, Ripple's narrative of "bank-level cooperation" began to collapse.
Foreign media outlet Forbes once published an article pointing out that Ripple's core business model might be a "pump and dump" scheme: Ripple used its massive holdings of XRP to buy partnerships, creating a false sense of prosperity, and used vague statements to evade regulation. Its ultimate goal was not to genuinely promote technology but to inflate the value of its freely acquired tokens through marketing and speculation, allowing insiders to cash out for profit.
In December 2020, the regulatory hammer fell.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) sued Ripple on the grounds of "unregistered sale of securities," accusing it of illegally raising over $1.3 billion through XRP. This was the most significant regulatory battle in the cryptocurrency industry.
The chain reaction triggered by the lawsuit was devastating: mainstream exchanges like Coinbase and Kraken quickly delisted XRP; long-term partner MoneyGram terminated its partnership; the price of XRP plummeted over 60% in the following month. Ripple not only suffered business setbacks but was also completely blacklisted in terms of compliance.
This years-long tug-of-war cost Ripple nearly $200 million in legal fees but also earned it crucial breathing space and favorable rulings from some courts, buying valuable time for strategic transformation.
In 2024, it officially launched the dollar-pegged stablecoin RLUSD, focusing on compliance and targeting payment and settlement for financial institutions. Unlike USDT and USDC, RLUSD is not designed for inter-exchange "stablecoin" use but attempts to enter traditional credit card and cross-border settlement systems.
In 2025, Ripple announced partnerships with Mastercard, WebBank, and Gemini to use RLUSD for real-time credit card settlements, becoming the world's first on-chain stablecoin to enter the card network system.
This not only opened up B-end channels for stablecoin applications but also cleared the way for Ripple to connect with the real financial world.
To build a complete on-chain financial capability, Ripple undertook a series of precise acquisitions between 2023 and 2025:
Acquisition of Metaco: Gained institutional-level digital asset custody technology, laying the foundation for serving large financial institutions.
Acquisition of Rail: Acquired a stablecoin issuance and management system, accelerating the launch process of RLUSD.
Acquisition of Hidden Road: Completed the last piece of the puzzle for institutional credit networks and cross-border settlement capabilities.
Through these acquisitions, Ripple's system capabilities have expanded from a single cross-border payment to a full-stack financial infrastructure of "stablecoin issuance + institutional custody + cross-chain settlement."
On the surface, Ripple's path seems to be widening.
But seasoned players in the capital market see a different picture.
To understand the true logic behind this financing, one must recognize the essence of Ripple: a massive "digital asset treasury."
At the inception of XRP, 80 billion of the 100 billion tokens were entrusted to Ripple for custody. As of now, the company still holds 34.76 billion tokens, with a nominal value exceeding $80 billion at market price—twice its financing valuation.
According to several venture capitalists, the $500 million deal is closely related to the purchase of XRP held by Ripple and is likely to be acquired at a price far below the spot price.
From an investment perspective, investors are essentially buying an asset at 0.5 times the mNAV (market value to net asset value ratio). Even with a 50% liquidity discount on XRP holdings, the value of this batch of assets still aligns with the company's valuation.
A source familiar with the situation told Unchained: "Even if they cannot successfully build a business themselves, they can directly acquire another company."
A venture capitalist stated: "This company has no value other than holding XRP. No one uses their technology, and no one cares about it on the network/blockchain."
Some community members expressed: "The equity of Ripple itself may not be worth much and certainly does not reach $40 billion."
One participant revealed the real logic: "The payment sector is too hot right now, and investors need to bet on multiple horses in the sector."
Ripple is just one of those horses—perhaps technically mediocre but with abundant resources (XRP reserves).
For Ripple, this is a win-win situation:
Stabilizing valuation: Officially "validating" the $40 billion valuation in the private equity market, providing a pricing benchmark for early investors to exit.
Avoiding sell pressure: Using financing cash for acquisitions to prevent selling XRP from impacting the market.
Ripple co-founder Chris Larsen's personal wealth has also surged to about $15 billion.
From this perspective, Ripple's story has transformed into a classic financial narrative: about assets, about valuation, about liquidity management.
From the defendant's seat in the SEC to the boardroom on Wall Street, Ripple's journey reflects the entire cryptocurrency industry's shift from idealism to realism. If the past Ripple represented the pinnacle of "narrative economics," today it demonstrates how, when the tide recedes, project parties rely on the most primitive capital strength to achieve a "soft landing."
Related: Ripple secures support from Citadel and Fortress, raising $500 million at a $40 billion valuation
Original text: “Wall Street's Calculation: What Does $500 Million Buy Ripple?”
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