Ripple to launch U.S. dollar stablecoin, taking on a $150 billion market dominated by
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In 2020, the U.S. SEC accused Ripple and its co-founders of breaching securities laws by selling its native cryptocurrency XRP without first registering it with the SEC.
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The crypto firm said its reserves would be accounted for in publicly available monthly attestation reports. It did not say which firm will audit.
Ripple is first launching its stablecoin in the U.S., but didn’t rule out offering additional regional products in non-U.S. markets, like Europe and Asia.
The move would pit Ripple against stablecoin giants like Tether, which is behind the largest stablecoin USDT, and USDC issuer Circle.
Payments giant PayPal, meanwhile, launched its own U.S. dollar stablecoin called PayPal USD, a stablecoin backed by U.S. dollars and dollar equivalents that is issued by crypto firm Paxos.
But Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse said he’s not deterred by the competition. “This market will look different [in future], certainly based on size,” he told CNBC in an interview this week.
Garlinghouse said the company decided to introduce a stablecoin to the market last year in response to the “depegging” of rival firms Tether’s USDT token and Circle’s USDC.
USDT temporarily lost its $1 peg in 2022 amid market instability resulting from the collapse of terraUSD, a popular so-called algorithmic stablecoin.
USDC also temporarily slipped below $1 in 2023 after revealing exposure to the collapsed tech-focused lender Silicon Valley Bank.
Some critics dispute the source of Tether’s reserves, and have doubts about whether company is sufficiently capitalized to survive a “bank run.”
For its part, Tether says its token is fully backed by quality reserves and has always been able to meet withdrawals, even in times of distress.
Garlinghouse said there’s “some uncertainty” about the current market leader among U.S. regulators, without disclosing a name. He argued that Ripple is a regulated institution with licenses in New York, Ireland and Singapore, among other countries.
Tether is the world’s largest stablecoin issuer, with a market capitalization of $106.3 billion, according to CoinGecko data.
Asked about Ripple’s move to launch a stablecoin and Garlinghouse’s comments, a Tether spokesperson told CNBC: “We wish Ripple’s team would have more success with their new stablecoin than they had so far.”
Tether is registered with FinCEN, the U.S. financial crimes watchdog, which is not the same as being regulated. The business is required to submit suspicious transaction reports and reports for deals totalling more than $10,000.
A Ripple stablecoin would also serve a purpose the crypto giant touts as part of its On-Demand Liquidity product, which aims to settle transactions rapidly between banks and other financial firms using the XRP token as a “bridge” currency.
Ripple has faced obstacles in finding a use case for Ripple with banks and payment firms.
Santander initially wanted to use XRP for cross-border payments, but chose not to after finding Ripple wasn’t active in enough markets yet to support its needs.
MoneyGram ended a partnership to use XRP for cross-border transfers after citing increased costs associated with the need for partnerships with exchanges and other necessary counterparties in local markets.
Garlinghouse insisted that Ripple hasn’t given up on XRP as a payment token and that stablecoins would serve as more of a complementary product for the XRP ecosystem.
“We’ve been using stablecoins in our payment flows for years,” he said. “This is not a new thing for us.”
He added that other so-called Layer 1 protocols — blockchain networks with their own tokens — have launched stablecoins and logged growth in overall volume and liquidity.
“Our view is, having pools of liquidity that are native to the XRP ledger, they complement and help grow the XRP ecosystem,” Garlinghouse told CNBC. “In fact, the number one request we get from the XRP community is to launch a USD-backed stablecoin on the XRP Ledger.”
XRP is up around 13% in the last 12 months, according to CoinGecko data, and is currently trading at about 57 cents.
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in 2020 hit Ripple with a lawsuit, claiming the company illegally sold XRP to investors when it should have registered the transactions with the regulator.
A court judge recently ruled XRP is not in and of itself a security, but said that sales to institutions should be counted as unlawful securities sales.
The blockchain company sold $728.9 million worth of its XRP token to hedge funds and other sophisticated buyers, according to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.
The SEC is seeking $2 billion from Ripple as part of its lawsuit.
Garlinghouse said that what the SEC is asking for is unreasonable, as it only pertains to the $728.9 million of XRP the company sold to institutions.
He expects the total settlement to be a fraction of that in the “millions,” rather than in the billions, of dollars.
The SEC was not immediately available for comment.
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