Ripple successfully operational in 5 jurisdictions

TL;DR Breakdown

  • Ripple`s CEO states that the entity successfully operates in five jurisdictions as a currency.
  • The ongoing SEC case against XRP weakens its market capitalization daily.

The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Ripple have been battling it out in court for more than a year. On December 22, 2020, the SEC filed a lawsuit against Ripple Labs and two of its executives. According to reports, they allegedly sold $1.3 billion in cryptocurrency XRP as security without registering it with the SEC. The entity and other parties immediately responded by stating that the SEC is biased in evaluating cryptocurrencies.

Ripple’s long road with SEC

In a recent interview, its CEO Brad Garlinghouse discussed the SEC’s view of cryptoasset XRP versus how financial regulators regard it in other major countries. According to Brad, the United States is the only country in the world that considers XRP security.

The SEC sued Ripple in December, alleging that XRP is a security because it was used to finance the company’s platform, which allows businesses to send money. Additionally, in the process, executives at the platform were rewarded with sales of XRP.

XRP has hit a market wall in recent weeks, as the impending legal battle has caused it to lose its third-place status. According to a report by Cryptopolitan, XRP was formerly the third-largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization. XRP is currently ranked sixth by market capitalization at $38 billion.

The future of the Ripple vs. SEC case is uncertain, with both sides unsure as to how it will turn out. Analisa Torres, a federal judge in New York, unsealed some evidence, sending the cryptocurrency industry into a tailspin. The SEC has continued to employ underhanded tactics to impede the XRP lawsuit’s progress.