Private Money, Public Avoidance
When most companies raise half a billion dollars at a $40 billion valuation, the next stop is usually Wall Street. Not Ripple. President Monica Long told Bloomberg the company plans to stay private, thank you very much, choosing to expand through acquisitions and product development rather than subjecting itself to quarterly earnings calls and public market drama.
The November funding round attracted some serious names—Fortress Investment Group, Citadel Securities, and various crypto-focused funds. Long described the terms as "very positive, very favorable for Ripple." Translation: they didn't need the money, but when institutional heavyweights come knocking with attractive terms, why not take it?
The typical IPO playbook is about accessing liquidity and a broader investor base. But Ripple apparently has enough cash to fund its ambitions without the scrutiny that comes with being a public company. Which is convenient when you're about to go on a multibillion-dollar shopping spree.
Building an Empire, One Acquisition at a Time
Ripple completed four major acquisitions in 2025, totaling nearly $4 billion. The haul includes Hidden Road (a global multi-asset prime broker), Rail (stablecoin payments), GTreasury (treasury management systems), and Palisade (digital asset custody). That's a lot of pieces to fit together.
The strategy is clear enough: transform from a payments company into a comprehensive enterprise digital asset infrastructure provider. As of November, Ripple Payments had processed over $95 billion in total volume. Ripple Prime—built on the Hidden Road acquisition—recently expanded into collateralized lending and institutional XRP products. And sitting at the center of it all is RLUSD, Ripple's dollar stablecoin.
Long framed it as creating "the connective tissue that traditional finance needs to make blockchain, cryptocurrencies, stablecoins, and tokenized assets actually useful in the real world." Fair point. The gap between crypto enthusiasm and practical institutional adoption remains wide, and Ripple is betting billions it can bridge that gap.
The Valuation That Doesn't Match the Token
Here's where things get interesting. Ripple's $40 billion private valuation represents a massive jump from its 2019 Series C round, which valued the company at $10 billion. Meanwhile, XRP crashed 48% from its July peak. The company's balance sheet is swelling while the token holders are getting crushed.
This disconnect highlights something fundamental: private valuations and public market sentiment operate in different universes. Without quarterly scrutiny, Ripple has plenty of runway to integrate its acquisitions and develop new services. But it also faces less external pressure to deliver immediate returns on that $4 billion spending spree.
More Deals on the Horizon
CEO Brad Garlinghouse has signaled more acquisitions are planned for 2026, with continued focus on product innovation and partnerships. The company's network of 300+ customers globally provides a foundation for driving adoption of its expanding service lineup.
Now comes the hard part: successfully integrating all these acquisitions and driving actual adoption of RLUSD to justify that $40 billion valuation. If the integration falters or returns on these deals materialize slowly, that lofty private valuation could become a problem when Ripple eventually needs to raise more capital.




