Ripple, the blockchain firm behind the cryptocurrency XRP (XRP-USD), officially went live with its Ripple Treasury platform this week. This is the company’s first major product release since its $1 billion acquisition of GTreasury, a move that allowed Ripple to absorb four decades of experience in traditional corporate finance.
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The new hub targets a massive headache for modern finance teams: the need to manage traditional bank accounts and digital tokens in two separate, disconnected systems. Ripple aims to capture a slice of the $120 trillion global treasury market through this unified approach.
Ripple Speeds Up Global Payments Using Stablecoins
The technical core of the system is the use of the RLUSD stablecoin to settle international payments in three to five seconds. In the traditional banking system, sending a wire transfer from the U.S. to Asia typically involves multiple intermediary banks and takes three to five business days to clear. This delay creates trapped capital, funds that are in transit and cannot be used for operations or investments.
Ripple Treasury addresses this by allowing blockchain transactions to function alongside a company’s existing banking software, reducing the need for firms to keep large amounts of cash sitting in overseas accounts to pre-fund future payments.
Garlinghouse Bridges the Gap for Institutional Yield
Beyond moving money, Ripple is giving companies new ways to earn interest on their cash. Through its acquisition of prime broker Hidden Road, Ripple now connects corporate users to overnight repo markets. This allows firms to put their money to work even on weekends and holidays when traditional banks are closed. The platform also integrates with tokenized money market funds, such as BlackRock’s (BLK) BUIDL.
CEO Brad Garlinghouse noted that the company’s goal is to provide “best-in-class” digital infrastructure that meets strict regulatory standards. To support this, Ripple has secured licenses in the U.K. and is currently pursuing a national banking license in the United States. This institutional focus is intended to make digital assets a standard tool for the Fortune 500, rather than just a speculative investment for retail traders.
Investors Should Recognize the Risks
While the technology promises efficiency, investors should be aware of several critical risks. Unlike traditional bank deposits, digital assets held on blockchain platforms are subject to technical risk, such as smart contract vulnerabilities or the loss of cryptographic keys.
Furthermore, while XRP can act as a bridge for liquidity, Ripple’s newer products lean heavily on stablecoins like RLUSD. This means that while Ripple the company may grow, the etfs-boom">direct demand for the XRP token depends on how much it is actually used as plumbing between different currencies. Additionally, the regulatory landscape for tokenized funds is still evolving, which could lead to sudden changes in how these assets are managed or taxed.
Key Takeaway
In simple terms, Ripple is trying to make sure that “corporate money” never has to take a nap. Traditionally, if a company wants to send money to another country or earn interest on its cash, it has to wait for banks to open and wires to clear. A world where a CFO can manage millions as easily as you check your balance on your phone is exactly what Ripple wants to create by combining a traditional software company with a blockchain network.
At the time of writing, XRP is sitting at $1.7736.


