Here's a puzzle for you: What happens when a cryptocurrency wins its years-long battle with regulators, launches ETFs that pull in a billion dollars, and its parent company goes on a $2.7 billion shopping spree? If you guessed "the price crashes 48%," congratulations—you understand XRP (XRP) in 2025.
It's been called an "incredible year" by some, and technically they're right. Just not in the way XRP holders were hoping.
The Lawsuit Victory Nobody Cared About
The SEC lawsuit against Ripple finally wrapped up in August when both parties dropped their appeals. This cemented a 2023 ruling that distinguished between institutional XRP sales and retail activity—a meaningful legal win by any measure.
The timing was characteristically messy. Former SEC Chair Gary Gensler filed a last-minute appeal just five days before Donald Trump fired him, echoing the lawsuit's original 2020 filing under similar political circumstances.
When the settlement hit on August 8, XRP rallied 8% in a day with trading volume jumping 146%. But that pop didn't stick. Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse wasn't in a celebratory mood either, calling out the SEC's "war of legal terror" and claiming the lawsuit cost XRP investors $15 billion in losses.
Ripple Became an Acquisition Machine
While the legal drama played out, Ripple went shopping—to the tune of $2.7 billion in 2025. The company wasn't just buying crypto startups; it was building a financial services empire.
The biggest move came in April with the $1.25 billion acquisition of Hidden Road, now rebranded as Ripple Prime. This made Ripple the first crypto firm to own a global multi-asset prime broker. The business reportedly tripled after acquisition, now processing over 60 million daily transactions.
In October, Ripple dropped another billion on GTreasury, gaining instant access to Fortune 500 clients like American Airlines Group Inc. (AAL), Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. (GT), and Volvo AB (VOLV-B). That deal brought exposure to more than $12.5 trillion in annual payment flows.
Smaller acquisitions included Rail for $200 million in August and wallet provider Palisade. These weren't panic buys—Ripple was methodically building infrastructure.
ETFs Arrived, Price Still Tanked
XRP spot ETFs finally launched in November 2025. The Canary XRP ETF posted $58 million in first-day volume, the strongest debut among 2025's ETF launches.
By mid-December, XRP funds had attracted $883 million in net inflows and accumulated $1.25 billion in assets. The products even posted a record 30-day inflow streak without a single day of outflows.
That kind of institutional demand should move markets. Instead, XRP traded around $1.88 by late December—down 48% from its $3.65 July peak. The disconnect between fundamentals and price was stunning.
The Stablecoin That Almost Mattered
Ripple's dollar-backed stablecoin RLUSD, launched in December 2024, reached a $1.3 billion market cap by year-end. That made it the 11th largest stablecoin—not bad for a new entrant.
The partnerships looked solid. Mastercard Inc. (MA) signed on for credit card settlements, Singapore gave regulatory approval, and BNY Mellon (BK) became the primary custodian for RLUSD reserves in July.
But here's the reality check: nearly three months after launch, RLUSD captured less than 0.7% of the stablecoin market. The infrastructure was there, but market share wasn't following.
How Timing Killed the Rally
XRP holders spent years dreaming of $10. Instead, they got a masterclass in why timing matters more than fundamentals in crypto.
Three delays destroyed the momentum:
Legal Delays: The SEC lawsuit didn't conclude until August 22, keeping institutions and ETF issuers on the sidelines for most of the year.
ETF Timing: XRP spot ETFs didn't launch until November, delayed by both the lawsuit and a government shutdown.
CLARITY Act Stalled: The bill remains stuck in Congress, delaying the regulatory framework banks need before they'll touch XRP at scale.
Garlinghouse predicts the CLARITY Act will pass in the first half of 2026, but crypto analyst Zach Rector warns it'll be a classic buy-the-rumor, sell-the-news event. Translation: Don't expect fireworks.
Looking forward, Ripple 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. Whether that moves the price is anyone's guess, but at this point, XRP has proven that good news doesn't guarantee green candles.




