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Ripple Launches Ripple Treasury
In a recent blog post, Ripple revealed that the new platform, Ripple Treasury,
In a Tuesday blog post, Ripple wrote that the new platform allows companies to manage fiat and digital assets from a single system. The platform is designed to address common treasury pain points such as multi-day settlement cycles and limited visibility across accounts, leveraging digital asset infrastructure to reduce settlement times and streamline cross-border payments.
The new platform allows corporate finance teams to move money internationally using Ripple’s dollar-pegged stablecoin RLUSD, settling payments in three to five seconds, unlike the typical bank wires, which take three to five business days.
According to Ripple, Ripple Treasury also supports yield strategies for reducing idle cash outside traditional banking hours, thus simplifying liquidity management for global companies.
 
The launch marks the first major product integration since Ripple acquired Chicago-headquartered GTreasury for $1 billion in October 2025. At the time, GTreasury Chief Executive Renaat Ver Eecke termed the deal a “watershed moment” for treasury management.
The new system replaces manual spreadsheet-based processes with direct API integrations, pulling balances and transactions from digital asset platforms into the same dashboards used for traditional cash, debt, and short-term investments. The concept entails allowing companies treat crypto rails as an extension of their current banking infrastructure, instead of a separate system managed manually.
Ripple’s Expansion Push
The launch of Ripple Treasury comes as San Francisco-based Ripple continues its bold expansion of regulated payments and financial services across prominent jurisdictions.
As ZyCrypto reported, Ripple obtained key approval from the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) for its Electronic Money Institution (EMI) license under the country’s Money Laundering Regulations (MLRs), setting the stage for the firm to expand its payments platform. Ripple also won preliminary e-money authorization from Luxembourg’s financial watchdogs this month.
In the U.S., Ripple applied for a national banking license with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency back in July, following similar moves from Circle and BitGo.
That said, Ripple has clarified that it has no immediate plans to go public, citing a strong balance sheet and a focus on growth initiatives following a slew of acquisitions, including prime brokerage Hidden Road.
XRP dropped sharply amid a broader Bitcoin-led crypto selloff. The cross-border payments token was trading at $1.74 at press time, down 2.3% on the day, according to CoinGecko data. With a market cap of $106 billion, XRP is ranked as the fifth-largest cryptocurrency, behind BNB.
XRP’s sideways price action is likely to continue before a sharp rocket surge toward the coveted $15 milestone.