Key Highlights
- Ripple acquires GTreasury, Rail, Palisade, and Ripple Prime to form a unified digital-asset platform.
- The company expands payments, custody, and liquidity services as it targets real-time global finance.
- The launch comes amid a $40B valuation and renewed regulatory attention on leveraged crypto products.
Ripple has announced four major acquisitions: GTreasury, Rail, Palisade, and Ripple Prime, marking one of the company’s largest expansion pushes to date.
The blockchain firm said the acquisitions aim to build a unified platform for custody, liquidity, treasury, payments, and settlement. Ripple has invested nearly $4 billion to position itself as a core infrastructure provider.
Why Ripple acquired each company
Three out of the four companies target different areas of institutional finance, while Ripple Prime adds execution and prime brokerage. Ripple confirmed the acquisitions today and outlined specific roles for the four firms:
- GTreasury: Expands corporate-treasury services, enabling real-time liquidity management and access to digital-asset rails.
- Rail: Adds virtual accounts and stablecoin-based payment infrastructure for businesses seeking faster global transactions.
- Palisade: Strengthens custody and wallet-as-a-service technology for institutions and high-volume fintechs.
- Ripple Prime: Provides institutional execution, clearing, and OTC liquidity across major digital assets.
The issuer behind XRP said these services will be offered under one integrated platform, with some units operating independently while benefiting from shared infrastructure.
Funding and global expansion
The acquisition follows Ripple’s $500 million funding round in November, which valued the company at $40 billion. Ripple said the capital will support further product development, particularly in payments and stablecoin infrastructure.
Earlier this month, the company also expanded its operations in Singapore after receiving an upgraded Major Payment Institution license from the Monetary Authority of Singapore. The license lets Ripple Payments support broader regulated cross-border flows in a key Asia-Pacific market.
SEC halts leveraged XRP and crypto funds
The announcement comes amid increased U.S. regulatory attention on leveraged crypto products.
On December 3, the SEC blocked ProShares from launching 3× leveraged Bitcoin, Ether, Solana, and XRP funds, citing violations of leverage rules. The SEC said such products expose retail investors to outsized risks given the volatility of the underlying assets.
XRP traded around $2.12 following the news, down roughly 8% month-over-month, though its market value remains up 2% year over year.
Ripple’s acquisitions point to a push toward a full-stack financial infrastructure combining payments, treasury, custody, and liquidity. Its progress in 2026 will hinge on integrating these businesses into a single platform.
Also read: RedotPay Integrates Ripple Payments, Expands Stablecoin Reach to NGN
