In May 2026, JPMorgan, Mastercard, and Ripple ran a cross‑border settlement that had never been done before. A tokenized US Treasury, issued by Ondo Finance, was redeemed across banks in about 4.2 seconds – after hours, on a public blockchain.
The chain was the XRP Ledger.

Financial analyst Jake Claver broke down the entire story in a detailed thread. His message: Ripple spent three years buying the financial plumbing that banks took a century to build. Most people weren’t watching.
Metaco (May 2023, $250 million): Ripple bought a Swiss custody firm. The clients already using it? BNP Paribas, Citi, Societe Generale, DZ Bank, BBVA, DBS, and Standard Chartered. BNP Paribas, the eighth largest bank in the world, runs its crypto custody on software Ripple owns – right now. Live and operational, not a press release.
Hidden Road (April 2025, $1.25 billion): Ripple renamed it Ripple Prime. It clears trades for hedge funds and trading desks to the tune of $3 trillion a year. Ripple moved settlement onto the XRP Ledger and made RLUSD usable as collateral across the entire platform. A year later, it had tripled in size, with more than 60 million transactions a day running through it.
GTreasury (October 2025, $1+ billion): A 40‑year‑old company that runs corporate treasury for Fortune 500 firms, with American Airlines as a client. It handled roughly $13 trillion in payments last year. Now it runs on RLUSD and the XRP Ledger.
Claver pointed out something most people miss. Coinbase built a great exchange. Solana built a fast chain. Ethereum has the deepest DeFi. But none of them own a prime broker, a Fortune 500 treasury platform, and a stablecoin custodied at BNY Mellon.
Ripple owns all three.
Banks took a century to build those three pieces. Ripple bought them between 2023 and 2025 for a few billion dollars.
RLUSD launched at zero in December 2024. By mid‑2026, it had crossed $1.7 billion in market cap, becoming one of the larger US‑regulated stablecoins. Its reserves sit at BNY Mellon, the bank Alexander Hamilton founded in 1784, which custodies tens of trillions in assets and answers to the New York Department of Financial Services.
Early 2024, none of this looked possible. Ripple was fighting a $1.3 billion SEC lawsuit. US exchanges had delisted XRP. ETFs were off the table. The price stayed flat because no American firm would touch it.
Then the wall came down:
Claver’s thread ends with a simple point: “The pieces are real, banks are testing live, and the chain settles in seconds. What’s left is the market catching up to what already exists. The infrastructure around XRP is being built in plain sight.”
The price of XRP today does not reflect the infrastructure that has been built. Ripple owns the plumbing for institutional finance.
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The post Ripple Owns the Financial Plumbing – JPMorgan, Mastercard, and XRP Just Proved It appeared first on CaptainAltcoin.


