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I've noticed something interesting in Ripple's recent strategy. While many in the crypto industry dream of going public, this company has taken a completely different direction. Monica Long, Ripple's president, publicly clarified that they have no plans for an initial public offering. No IPO on the horizon, at least for now.
The reason? Ripple has built such a solid financial structure that they simply don't feel the need. With the half-billion-dollar funding round completed in November 2025, their valuation has risen to $40 billion. Major players like Fortress Investment Group and Citadel Securities participated, along with several crypto-focused funds. Long described the terms as "extremely favorable" for the company.
This approach to private growth, without the pressure of an IPO, offers flexibility that they likely wouldn't have as a publicly traded company. Decision-making processes are faster, and they can move strategically without responding to short-term market whims. It's a choice that reflects a long-term infrastructural vision rather than a quest for immediate liquidity.
What makes this position even more interesting is what Ripple is actually doing with these resources. Throughout 2025, they launched an impressive acquisition push, spending around $4 billion in total. They integrated Hidden Road, a global multi-asset platform; the Rail payments platform; GTreasury for treasury management; and Palisade for wallet and custody services.
The picture is clear: Ripple is building a comprehensive ecosystem of solutions for crypto enterprise infrastructure. Ripple Payments already surpassed $95 billion in transaction volume by November. Ripple Prime, born from the acquisition of Hidden Road, is expanding its offerings with collateralized lending products and XRP-specific solutions.
At the center of it all is RLUSD, their dollar-pegged stablecoin. It acts as a crucial bridge in payment and financing processes. Long describes the essence of the strategy as "building products" that reduce the gap between traditional finance and blockchain assets.
This choice to stay private, rejecting an IPO, allows Ripple to focus on what truly matters: developing infrastructure that makes tokenized assets and stablecoins genuinely usable in the real world. It's a different strategy from many other crypto companies, but the numbers suggest it's working.