The war is over. After a long, bruising slugfest that twisted the crypto market, Ripple Labs and the SEC have walked away from the table. An agreement in August 2025 to drop all appeals means the court’s verdict is now the law of the land, carving out a strange and complicated path for XRP.
While the legal fog has lifted, Ripple is left with the scars – A massive fine and a permanent leash on how it sells tokens to big-money players.
The judge’s ruling from New York’s Southern District essentially sliced the baby in half, a decision that has completely scrambled the conversation about what makes a crypto asset a security. For Ripple and the crypto world at large, the big win was Judge Analisa Torres’s declaration that everyday people buying and selling XRP on an exchange are not trading in securities.
However, she sided with the SEC on a key point – Ripple’s direct, back-room sales of XRP to institutional clients were absolutely unregistered securities offerings.
This final word kills the biggest legal threat that has choked XRP for years, but it replaces it with a new set of handcuffs. Ripple got slapped with a $125 million penalty and is now under a permanent injunction. With no appeals left, the only thing left is for a clerk to stamp the case file “closed.”
Life under the injunction
Ripple’s biggest headache now is that permanent injunction. It stops the company cold from repeating the kind of unregistered institutional XRP sales that got it into trouble in the first place. This isn’t a total ban, but it means any future direct sales to institutions have to be either registered with the SEC or find a legal exemption.
Insiders believe the court order is aimed squarely at the specific type of contracts Ripple used before 2018. And, word is the company has already overhauled its institutional sales process to stay on the right side of the law.
Exchanges are back on board!
The court’s statement that XRP itself is not a security was all the cover exchanges needed. It was a green light for platforms like Coinbase, Kraken, and Gemini, which had kicked XRP to the curb back in 2020 after the SEC first filed suit.
With the lawsuit dead and buried, big money is sniffing around again. The certainty has sparked a fresh wave of confidence among institutional investors. Ripple has been busy inking new deals, like a cross-chain project with Cardano to make the two networks talk to each other.
You can even see XRP seeping back into the mainstream with products like a new Gemini credit card that pays out rewards in the token.
ETF dream and its effect on the price
The end of the lawsuit gave XRP’s price a serious jolt, pushing it to levels it hasn’t seen since the 2018 bull run. However, the real game-changer everyone is watching for is a spot XRP Exchange-Traded Fund (ETF) in the States. Getting legal clarity was the final boss battle before this could even be a possibility.
Now, at least seven Wall Street giants, from Grayscale to Franklin Templeton and Bitwise, have S-1 applications for an XRP ETF sitting on the SEC’s desk.
Bloomberg analysts are practically calling it a done deal, giving it a 95% chance of approval by as soon as October 2025. If that happens, it could unleash a firehose of institutional cash, much like the Bitcoin ETFs did.
Source: Polymarket
Can on-demand liquidity (ODL) actually push XRP to $50?
At the heart of Ripple’s plan to take over global finance is its On-Demand Liquidity (ODL) service. The whole idea is to use XRP as a momentary bridge between two currencies, letting banks zip money across borders faster and cheaper without needing piles of cash sitting idle in foreign accounts.
However, here’s the problem – Figuring out how much money is actually zipping through ODL is almost impossible because Ripple doesn’t release consistent numbers. You see wild claims online of $1.3 trillion quarterly volumes. However, the harder data from 2024 showed a more sober $15 billion in transactions.
As of 2025, it seems about 40% of RippleNet’s 300-plus partners are actually using XRP for payments.
For XRP to ever justify a wild price tag like $50, ODL would have to swallow a chunk of the global payments market so large it borders on fantasy. We’re talking about a market that moves around $1.8 quadrillion a year. SWIFT alone, the current king, handles about $150 trillion.
Because XRP is only held for a few seconds in each ODL transaction, the volume of payments would have to be beyond astronomical to support that kind of market cap – Likely more than what SWIFT handles today.
XRP isn’t alone in this fight
Ripple’s dream of ruling cross-border payments is being challenged from all sides by some serious heavyweights.
Stablecoins – The 800-pound gorillas in the room are digital dollars like USDC and Tether. They offer the same pitch of speed and low fees, and their combined market cap has exploded to a quarter of a trillion dollars. They’re already processing trillions in volume, and both fintechs and old-school banks are using them to slash transaction costs.
Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) – The government is coming for the crown. The biggest long-term threat might just be from central banks themselves. A joint effort by China, Hong Kong, Thailand, and the UAE called Project mBridge has already built and tested a platform for wholesale CBDCs. With 134 countries, representing nearly all of the world’s economy, looking into their own digital currencies, the writing is on the wall.
SWIFT GPI – Don’t count out the old guard. SWIFT didn’t just sit there and wait to be disrupted. Its Global Payments Innovation (GPI) initiative has made old-school bank transfers surprisingly fast and trackable. Almost all GPI payments now land within 24 hours, and many arrive in less than 30 minutes. SWIFT is using its massive, unbeatable network to fight back hard.
XRPL tries to grow up
Ripple knows it can’t just be about payments anymore. So, it’s trying to turn the XRP Ledger (XRPL) into a full-blown ecosystem for DeFi and Web3. The big moves include –
- Smart contracts – A new feature called “Hooks” is expected to go live in 2025, bringing lightweight smart contract abilities to the ledger without slowing it down.
- Native NFTs – Since late 2022, the XRPL has supported NFTs directly, sparking a small but busy scene with millions of collectibles minted across a handful of marketplaces.
- EVM compatibility – In a huge step, Ripple launched a sidechain compatible with Ethereum’s code in June 2025. This lets Ethereum developers bring their apps over to the XRP ecosystem.
All of this is designed to create real, organic reasons for people to use XRP. Whether for transaction fees, as gas for the new sidechain, or to move value between the main network and its offshoots.
Big picture – Money and moods
For XRP to hit a moonshot price like $50, the whole world has to be in a gambling mood. That kind of “risk-on” fever only happens when central banks are printing money, interest rates are low, and inflation is making people desperate to put their cash into something that can’t be devalued.
The Federal Reserve’s current position is a mixed bag, with stubborn inflation and no clear path to rate cuts. Any massive crypto rally, for XRP or anyone else, will probably have to wait for the world’s central banks to turn the money spigots back on.
Source: XRP/USD, TradingView
What is the bear case for XRP?
Despite the legal victory, XRP is still haunted by the same old criticisms that have followed it for years.
- Centralization – Critics still scream that it’s “Ripple’s coin.” They point to the company’s influence and the fact that not just anyone can run a validator on the network as proof that it isn’t truly decentralized.
- Ripple’s giant bag – Ripple still holds a colossal amount of XRP, with over 35 billion tokens in escrow. This fuels the constant fear that the company is just using retail investors as its personal ATM to cash out.
- Is anyone really using it? Skeptics still question how much real-world utility XRP has. They argue many of Ripple’s partners use the company’s messaging software but never actually touch the XRP token. The rise of better, more flexible competitors only adds fuel to that fire.
History doesn’t repeat itself, but it rhymes
Crypto markets move in waves. Altcoin seasons usually kick off after Bitcoin has had a massive run-up and starts to cool down. These cycles are always powered by a compelling story, whether it was the ICO mania of 2017 or the DeFi and NFT craze of 2021.
XRP was a superstar in the 2017-2018 cycle, but was forced to sit on the sidelines during the last bull run, shackled by the SEC lawsuit. Now, the chains are off.
With the legal fight over and the possibility of new Wall Street products on the horizon, the stars that aligned for past altcoin explosions seem to be lining up once again, putting XRP in a very interesting spot.