Ripple announced an expansion of Ripple Payments into a licensed end-to-end platform covering collections, custody, liquidity, and settlement across both fiat and stablecoin rails, integrating technology from its 2025 acquisitions of Palisade and Rail.
The original Ripple Payments platform handled cross-border transfers. The expanded version adds collection infrastructure, custody, and treasury management to that core, turning it from a transfer tool into a complete money movement stack.
The practical change for enterprise clients is consolidation. A corporate treasury managing cross-border payments currently uses separate vendors for collections, custody, FX conversion, and settlement. Ripple is offering a single interface that handles all four. That value proposition is straightforward: fewer vendors means fewer integrations, fewer reconciliation failures, and a single compliance relationship rather than multiple.
The integration of Palisade for custody and Rail for virtual accounts, both acquired in 2025, is what makes the expanded offering credible rather than aspirational. Ripple is not building these capabilities from scratch. It acquired functional products with existing clients and is now connecting them into a unified platform.
Collections: Businesses accept pay-ins in fiat and stablecoins through named virtual accounts and wallets, with automated settlement into operational accounts. The Rail acquisition is the infrastructure behind this.
Custody: Secure wallet provisioning and high-speed transaction signing. The Palisade acquisition provides this. For institutions handling large volumes of digital assets, custody is the highest-stakes operational requirement. Outsourcing it to a provider with a NYDFS Trust Company Charter changes the risk profile.
Liquidity: Ripple’s existing liquidity pools handle FX conversion and cross-asset movement at the point of settlement rather than requiring clients to pre-position funds in destination currencies.
Settlement: RLUSD and XRP as the settlement layer. RLUSD recently surpassed a $1 billion market cap. For corridors where RLUSD or XRP provide faster or cheaper settlement than correspondent banking, the platform routes accordingly.
Ripple Payments is live in over 60 markets. Total transaction volume processed exceeds $100 billion. The company holds more than 75 global licenses including the NYDFS Trust Company Charter. Early partners using the new capabilities include Corpay, AMINA Bank, Banco Genial, MassPay, and ECIB.
The 30% faster fund movement claim compared to legacy methods is a headline figure that will vary significantly by corridor. For high-friction corridors where correspondent banking chains are long, 30% faster is plausible. For well-established corridors with direct relationships, the gap is smaller. The claim is directionally correct but the corridor-specific reality is more nuanced.
The RLUSD integration is worth examining separately from the platform expansion. Ripple’s fiat-backed stablecoin crossing $1 billion in market cap gives it the liquidity depth to function as a settlement asset in institutional corridors rather than just a niche product.
A platform that routes settlements through RLUSD is effectively using a Ripple-issued stablecoin as the clearing mechanism. That creates network effects: more platform volume creates more RLUSD demand, which deepens liquidity, which improves settlement rates, which attracts more platform volume. It is the same flywheel that USDT built for Tether on trading infrastructure, applied to B2B payment infrastructure.
The difference is regulatory clarity. RLUSD operates under the NYDFS Trust Company Charter. That is a higher compliance standard than most stablecoin issuers carry. For the institutional and fintech clients Ripple is targeting, that distinction matters in ways it does not for retail stablecoin users.
Ripple is competing with correspondent banking networks, SWIFT-adjacent infrastructure, and increasingly with Stripe, which acquired Bridge specifically for its stablecoin payment infrastructure. The Visa-Bridge expansion announced earlier this week targets the same institutional and fintech payment corridor. The SoFi-Mastercard partnership and SWIFT’s shared ledger project with BNY Mellon are all building toward the same destination from different directions.
The week’s coverage has documented at least six separate institutional initiatives building cross-border payment infrastructure on blockchain rails. Ripple is the most established of them in terms of live markets and transaction volume. Whether that first-mover advantage compounds or gets competed away depends on which platforms the major financial institutions ultimately standardize on.
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