For most of the past decade, Ripple occupied a relatively simple position within the digital asset industry. It was the company behind XRP, the cryptocurrency designed to facilitate cross-border payments. Whether one viewed XRP as a revolutionary settlement asset or an overhyped token, the discussion usually revolved around the same themes: banks, payments and regulation.
That description no longer captures what Ripple has become.
Over the past three years, and particularly over the last twelve months, Ripple has assembled a collection of businesses that extend far beyond cryptocurrency payments. The company now operates across stablecoins, institutional custody, tokenization, treasury infrastructure and prime brokerage. More importantly, these businesses are increasingly connected. Rather than building isolated products, Ripple appears to be constructing a financial infrastructure stack that resembles parts of a modern investment bank.
The comparison may sound ambitious, but the numbers behind Ripple’s recent expansion deserve attention.
The $1.25 Billion Deal That Changed Ripple’s Identity
The clearest signal arrived in April 2025 when Ripple announced its acquisition of Hidden Road for $1.25 billion, one of the largest acquisitions in digital asset industry history. While the transaction received significant attention within institutional circles, many retail investors underestimated its importance because Hidden Road is not a consumer-facing brand.
Hidden Road is a prime broker. Prime brokers provide clearing, financing, securities lending and operational infrastructure for institutional clients. They sit at the center of financial markets, connecting hedge funds, trading firms and asset managers to liquidity and capital.
The scale of Hidden Road is substantial. The firm clears more than $3 trillion annually across markets and serves over 300 institutional customers. Following the acquisition, Ripple became the only crypto company to own and operate a global multi-asset prime brokerage.
That distinction matters because most crypto firms still operate at the edge of traditional finance. Hidden Road already operates inside it.
Coinbase built an exchange. Circle built a stablecoin business. Tether dominates stablecoin issuance. Ripple bought infrastructure that institutional investors already use.
The acquisition moved Ripple closer to Wall Street than almost any other crypto company.
RLUSD Is Growing Faster Than Most Expected
The second pillar of Ripple’s strategy is RLUSD.
When Ripple launched its dollar-backed stablecoin in December 2024, many observers viewed it as a defensive response to the growing importance of stablecoins. Today, RLUSD appears increasingly central to the company’s institutional ambitions.
Recent market data places RLUSD’s market capitalization at roughly $1.7 billion. The stablecoin crossed the $1 billion threshold less than a year after launch and has continued growing rapidly throughout 2026. Multiple market-tracking services now place RLUSD among the larger regulated dollar-backed stablecoins in the industry.
The growth itself is impressive.
The more interesting development is where RLUSD is being positioned.
According to Ripple and Reuters reporting surrounding the Hidden Road acquisition, RLUSD is being integrated into prime brokerage operations as collateral. That moves the stablecoin beyond simple crypto trading and into the infrastructure layer of institutional finance.
Historically, stablecoins were largely associated with cryptocurrency exchanges. Ripple appears to be positioning RLUSD as a settlement, collateral and treasury-management tool. Those are functions traditionally performed by banks and large financial institutions.
The strategy becomes even more interesting when viewed alongside Hidden Road. Ripple now controls both the stablecoin and the prime broker capable of distributing and utilizing that stablecoin within institutional workflows.
Custody Has Become A Core Business
Another important piece of the puzzle is custody.
In 2023, Ripple acquired Swiss custody provider Metaco for $250 million. At the time, the transaction received far less attention than the SEC lawsuit or XRP price movements. In hindsight, the acquisition looks increasingly strategic.
Custody sits at the center of institutional digital asset adoption. Banks, asset managers and financial institutions cannot participate meaningfully in digital assets without secure custody infrastructure. Ripple has repeatedly positioned custody as a foundation for tokenization, stablecoins and institutional participation in digital asset markets.
The logic mirrors traditional finance. JPMorgan is not valuable because it moves money. It is valuable because it controls multiple layers of financial infrastructure. Custody, treasury services, financing and settlement reinforce one another.
Ripple appears to be following a similar blueprint.
The Tokenization Opportunity
The growth of tokenized assets provides another indication that Ripple’s ambitions extend beyond payments.
Recent XRP Ledger ecosystem reports showed tokenized real-world assets on XRPL growing rapidly during 2026. Some estimates place tokenized assets on the network at approximately $3.5 billion, compared with under $1 billion earlier in the year. Daily transaction activity on XRPL has also increased significantly, reaching millions of transactions per day.
These figures remain small compared with traditional capital markets.
They are large enough to demonstrate that tokenization is no longer a theoretical concept.
Banks, asset managers and infrastructure providers increasingly view tokenization as a future growth area. Ripple’s custody, settlement and stablecoin businesses all align naturally with that trend.
The pieces fit together in a way that many crypto business models do not.
The Question Nobody Wants To Ask
The most interesting question concerns XRP itself.
For years, XRP sat at the center of Ripple’s story. Today, Ripple’s ecosystem includes payments, custody, stablecoins, tokenization and prime brokerage. The company has become substantially larger than any single asset.
That creates an uncomfortable debate within parts of the XRP community.
If institutions increasingly use RLUSD for collateral and settlement, does XRP become more important or less important?
The answer remains unclear.
One view argues that every new Ripple product ultimately strengthens the broader ecosystem and creates additional demand for XRP-based infrastructure. Another argues that institutions generally prefer stable assets for settlement and collateral, which could increase RLUSD’s importance relative to XRP in certain use cases.
Either way, the discussion illustrates how much Ripple has changed.
A company once defined almost entirely by XRP is now creating businesses that generate strategic questions independent of XRP’s price.
More Infrastructure Than Crypto
The easiest way to understand Ripple’s evolution is to compare it with other major crypto companies.
Coinbase remains primarily an exchange. Circle remains primarily a stablecoin issuer. Tether remains primarily a stablecoin issuer. Fireblocks focuses on infrastructure. Chainalysis focuses on blockchain intelligence.
Ripple now spans payments, custody, stablecoins, treasury infrastructure, tokenization and prime brokerage. Few crypto firms operate across so many segments simultaneously.
That does not guarantee success. Building a financial conglomerate is difficult. Regulatory requirements increase. Operational complexity expands. Competition comes from both traditional finance and crypto-native firms.
Yet the direction is increasingly difficult to ignore.
Most crypto companies built products.
Ripple appears to be assembling financial infrastructure.
Takeaway
The most important Ripple story in 2026 is not XRP’s price, ETF speculation or the SEC lawsuit. It is the company’s transformation into a multi-layer financial infrastructure provider. The $1.25 billion Hidden Road acquisition gave Ripple a prime broker clearing more than $3 trillion annually for over 300 institutional clients. RLUSD has grown into a roughly $1.7 billion stablecoin and is now being used within institutional collateral workflows. Custody, tokenization and treasury services continue expanding alongside those businesses. Whether Ripple ultimately becomes the digital asset equivalent of a financial conglomerate remains uncertain, but few crypto companies have assembled a comparable collection of institutional infrastructure assets.