Key Takeaways:
- Ripple confirms it has no plans for an IPO, citing a strong balance sheet and ample private capital.
- A November 2025 share sale valued Ripple at $40 billion, attracting heavyweight investors like Citadel Securities and Fortress.
- The company has spent nearly $4 billion on acquisitions, expanding aggressively across payments, custody, prime brokerage, and stablecoins.
Ripple President Monica Long reaffirmed the company’s private-market strategy in a recent interview, following heightened investor attention after its latest share sale. The comments underscore Ripple’s confidence in funding growth internally while scaling its crypto infrastructure business globally.
Read More: Ripple Launches $1B Digital Asset Treasury to Build Massive XRP Hoard, Drive Institutional Use
Ripple Doubles Down on Staying Private
Ripple has once again shut the door on IPO speculation. Speaking on Bloomberg Crypto, President Monica Long made it clear that Ripple does not need public markets to execute its strategy. According to Long, the company is financially strong enough to keep expanding without sacrificing control or flexibility.
Unlike many crypto firms that view an IPO as a liquidity lifeline, Ripple sees little urgency. Access to capital, Long explained, is no longer the main reason companies go public. For Ripple, private funding already provides the resources needed to build, acquire, and scale.
This stance comes just months after Ripple completed a $500 million share sale in November 2025, a transaction that reignited market chatter about a possible public listing. The deal supported the fact that Ripple would prefer to stay private, rather than indicate an IPO course.
$40 Billion Valuation Draws Institutional Heavyweights
The November sale of shares valued Ripple at around 40 billion, which makes it one of the most valuable crypto-based private companies. The round was led by the high-profile institutional investors such as Citadel Securities and Fortress Investment Group, as well as several crypto-focused funds. Their turnout underscored increased institutional belief in the long-term business model of Ripple, particularly since the crypto infrastructure has evolved beyond the world of speculative trading.
Long stated terms of the deal as very fertile to Ripple, but she did not speak about particular investor protection. Market reports indicated that the round might have had downside protections common in later-stage private financings, however, Ripple has not verified the information.
Of more significance, according to Long, is the fact that the company did not have to raise capital. This was also a transaction that was designed to help it grow strategically and not to balance-sheet gaps.
Expansion Fueled by Aggressive M&A
Ripple’s refusal to pursue an IPO is closely tied to its acquisition-led growth strategy.
Read More: Ripple Unveils Full U.S. Spot Prime Brokerage Access for Institutional Crypto Trading
Building an End-to-End Crypto Infrastructure Stack
Over the course of 2025, Ripple completed four major acquisitions with a combined value of nearly $4 billion, dramatically broadening its product portfolio:
- Hidden Road – A global multi-asset prime broker that now anchors Ripple Prime, the firm’s institutional trading and financing arm.
- Rail – A stablecoin-focused payments platform designed to enhance enterprise settlement flows.
- GTreasury – A treasury management system provider that strengthens Ripple’s appeal to corporate clients.
- Palisade – A secure asset management service and a digital asset wallet company, growing the Ripple asset management capacity.
The idea behind these purchases is a definite intention: Ripple is hoping to become the bridge between the established finance and blockchain architecture. Instead of staking on one product, Ripple is putting together a full-stack solution, which includes payments, liquidity, custody, treasury tools, and institutional services.
Payments, Prime Brokerage, and Stablecoins at Scale
The fundamental businesses of Ripple are already at a very high scale. By November 2025, Ripple Payments had a total transaction volume exceeding $95 billion, highlighting the fact that the company was gaining momentum with its enterprise and cross-border payment customers.
Ripple Prime, which was established based on the acquisition of Hidden Road, is meanwhile diversified into collateralized lending and institutional products with XRP. This puts Ripple into closer competition with more traditional prime brokerage platforms in crypto-native and traditional financial markets.
The key to these offerings is RLUSD, the dollar-denominated stablecoin of Ripple. The role of RLUSD in payments, liquidity management, and institutional products is significant, which supports the direction of Ripple to stabilize its ecosystem in terms of regulated and enterprise-level infrastructure of stablecoins.