Marketdash

XRP Falls 48% Despite Ripple's $2.7 Billion Acquisition Push: Building Infrastructure While Price Bleeds

MarketDash Editorial Team
7 hours ago
XRP has tumbled 48% from its July high of $3.65, even as Ripple Labs deployed $2.7 billion across strategic acquisitions in 2025. The company built out prime brokerage, treasury management, and stablecoin infrastructure while institutional demand through ETFs hit $1 billion in inflows.

Here's a puzzle for you: What do you get when a crypto company spends $2.7 billion building financial infrastructure, settles a four-year legal battle with the SEC, launches a successful stablecoin, and attracts $1 billion in ETF inflows? If you guessed a 48% price drop, you'd be absolutely correct.

XRP (XRP) hit $3.65 in July. Today it's trading roughly half that amount. Meanwhile, Ripple Labs has been on an acquisition spree that would make a private equity firm blush, assembling what looks like a full-stack financial services company while the token price does the exact opposite of moon.

The Legal Cloud Finally Lifts

Ripple's transformation story really starts with the end of its exhausting legal drama with the U.S. SEC. After four years of courtroom battles that began in 2020, both sides dropped their appeals in August. The move reinforced a 2023 ruling that drew a line between institutional XRP sales and retail activity, effectively removing the regulatory uncertainty that had been hanging over Ripple like a dark cloud.

The timing lined up nicely with a broader shift toward more crypto-friendly policy under Trump's administration, opening the door for Ripple to actually build something instead of just paying lawyers.

A $2.7 Billion Shopping Spree

Ripple's 2025 strategy was less about pumping token prices and more about buying actual businesses. The company dropped roughly $2.7 billion across multiple deals, each adding a different piece to its financial services puzzle.

The biggest check went out in April when Ripple acquired Hidden Road for $1.25 billion and rebranded it as Ripple Prime. That deal made Ripple the first crypto company to own a global multi-asset prime broker. Since the acquisition, Ripple Prime's business reportedly tripled in size.

Then in October, Ripple added GTreasury for $1 billion. This wasn't just another crypto acquisition. GTreasury brought enterprise access to Fortune 500 clients including American Airlines Group Inc., Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., and Volvo AB. The platform also gave Ripple exposure to more than $12.5 trillion in annual payment flows. That's trillion with a T.

Smaller deals rounded out the year: Rail for $200 million in August and wallet provider Palisade. Together, these moves pushed Ripple well beyond its original payments-focused identity into broader financial services territory.

RLUSD Stablecoin Climbs to $1.3 Billion

Ripple's dollar-backed stablecoin RLUSD launched in December 2024 but really picked up steam throughout 2025. By year-end, it hit a $1.3 billion market cap, making it the 11th largest stablecoin despite being less than a year old.

The stablecoin landed some serious partnerships along the way. Mastercard Inc. (MA) signed on for credit card settlements, and Singapore regulators gave it the green light. In December, Ripple received conditional approval for a National Bank Charter from the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, with reserves held at Bank of New York Mellon Corp.

XRP ETFs Attract $1 Billion Despite Price Weakness

XRP joined the ETF party in 2025 when Rex Shares and Osprey Funds launched the first product with $38 million in day-one volume. Canary Capital, Grayscale, Bitwise, and Franklin Templeton followed shortly after with their own spot ETF offerings.

By December, XRP spot ETFs had generated nearly $1 billion in net inflows without a single day of outflows through mid-December. Assets under management crossed $1.25 billion by late December, making XRP the fastest cryptocurrency to reach the $1 billion ETF milestone since Ethereum (ETH) launched its ETF.

The catch? All that institutional demand didn't translate into surging prices. Apparently you can have strong ETF inflows and a bleeding token price at the same time. Who knew.

Native Lending Coming in 2026

Ripple isn't done building yet. The company plans to roll out native lending on the XRP Ledger in 2026 through XRPL Version 3.0.0, pushing the network beyond payments into institutional-grade DeFi territory.

Ripple engineer Edward Hennis said the amendments should enter validator voting in late January 2026. Once live, market makers will be able to borrow XRP or RLUSD while token holders can earn yield by lending to credit facilities.

RippleNet has also expanded to more than 300 banks and financial institutions as of November 2025. That same month, Ripple raised $500 million from global investors at a $40 billion valuation. CEO Brad Garlinghouse called it a clear endorsement of the company's long-term growth strategy.

So yes, XRP spent 2025 building an impressive financial infrastructure while the token price fell nearly in half. Whether all this infrastructure eventually translates to token value remains the multi-billion dollar question.

XRP Falls 48% Despite Ripple's $2.7 Billion Acquisition Push: Building Infrastructure While Price Bleeds

MarketDash Editorial Team
7 hours ago
XRP has tumbled 48% from its July high of $3.65, even as Ripple Labs deployed $2.7 billion across strategic acquisitions in 2025. The company built out prime brokerage, treasury management, and stablecoin infrastructure while institutional demand through ETFs hit $1 billion in inflows.

Here's a puzzle for you: What do you get when a crypto company spends $2.7 billion building financial infrastructure, settles a four-year legal battle with the SEC, launches a successful stablecoin, and attracts $1 billion in ETF inflows? If you guessed a 48% price drop, you'd be absolutely correct.

XRP (XRP) hit $3.65 in July. Today it's trading roughly half that amount. Meanwhile, Ripple Labs has been on an acquisition spree that would make a private equity firm blush, assembling what looks like a full-stack financial services company while the token price does the exact opposite of moon.

The Legal Cloud Finally Lifts

Ripple's transformation story really starts with the end of its exhausting legal drama with the U.S. SEC. After four years of courtroom battles that began in 2020, both sides dropped their appeals in August. The move reinforced a 2023 ruling that drew a line between institutional XRP sales and retail activity, effectively removing the regulatory uncertainty that had been hanging over Ripple like a dark cloud.

The timing lined up nicely with a broader shift toward more crypto-friendly policy under Trump's administration, opening the door for Ripple to actually build something instead of just paying lawyers.

A $2.7 Billion Shopping Spree

Ripple's 2025 strategy was less about pumping token prices and more about buying actual businesses. The company dropped roughly $2.7 billion across multiple deals, each adding a different piece to its financial services puzzle.

The biggest check went out in April when Ripple acquired Hidden Road for $1.25 billion and rebranded it as Ripple Prime. That deal made Ripple the first crypto company to own a global multi-asset prime broker. Since the acquisition, Ripple Prime's business reportedly tripled in size.

Then in October, Ripple added GTreasury for $1 billion. This wasn't just another crypto acquisition. GTreasury brought enterprise access to Fortune 500 clients including American Airlines Group Inc., Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., and Volvo AB. The platform also gave Ripple exposure to more than $12.5 trillion in annual payment flows. That's trillion with a T.

Smaller deals rounded out the year: Rail for $200 million in August and wallet provider Palisade. Together, these moves pushed Ripple well beyond its original payments-focused identity into broader financial services territory.

RLUSD Stablecoin Climbs to $1.3 Billion

Ripple's dollar-backed stablecoin RLUSD launched in December 2024 but really picked up steam throughout 2025. By year-end, it hit a $1.3 billion market cap, making it the 11th largest stablecoin despite being less than a year old.

The stablecoin landed some serious partnerships along the way. Mastercard Inc. (MA) signed on for credit card settlements, and Singapore regulators gave it the green light. In December, Ripple received conditional approval for a National Bank Charter from the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, with reserves held at Bank of New York Mellon Corp.

XRP ETFs Attract $1 Billion Despite Price Weakness

XRP joined the ETF party in 2025 when Rex Shares and Osprey Funds launched the first product with $38 million in day-one volume. Canary Capital, Grayscale, Bitwise, and Franklin Templeton followed shortly after with their own spot ETF offerings.

By December, XRP spot ETFs had generated nearly $1 billion in net inflows without a single day of outflows through mid-December. Assets under management crossed $1.25 billion by late December, making XRP the fastest cryptocurrency to reach the $1 billion ETF milestone since Ethereum (ETH) launched its ETF.

The catch? All that institutional demand didn't translate into surging prices. Apparently you can have strong ETF inflows and a bleeding token price at the same time. Who knew.

Native Lending Coming in 2026

Ripple isn't done building yet. The company plans to roll out native lending on the XRP Ledger in 2026 through XRPL Version 3.0.0, pushing the network beyond payments into institutional-grade DeFi territory.

Ripple engineer Edward Hennis said the amendments should enter validator voting in late January 2026. Once live, market makers will be able to borrow XRP or RLUSD while token holders can earn yield by lending to credit facilities.

RippleNet has also expanded to more than 300 banks and financial institutions as of November 2025. That same month, Ripple raised $500 million from global investors at a $40 billion valuation. CEO Brad Garlinghouse called it a clear endorsement of the company's long-term growth strategy.

So yes, XRP spent 2025 building an impressive financial infrastructure while the token price fell nearly in half. Whether all this infrastructure eventually translates to token value remains the multi-billion dollar question.