Ripple’s US$500M Raise Attracts Wall Street Giants With Deal Offering Built-In Downside Protection
Investor protections include sell-back options with 10–25% annualised returns and a liquidation-preference clause.
XRP holdings dominate Ripple’s valuation, while acquisitions and business expansions support diversification beyond crypto.
In November, Ripple raised US$500 million (AU$770 million) in a private share sale that brought in major Wall Street investors, pushing the company’s valuation to approximately US$40 billion (AU$61.6 billion).
Citadel Securities and Fortress Investment Group were among the buyers, alongside funds associated with Marshall Wace, Brevan Howard, Galaxy Digital, and Pantera Capital. Beyond the sheer scale of the investment, the deal was notable for incorporating investor protections that shield participants from crypto market volatility.
Participating investors have the option to sell their shares back to Ripple after three or four years at a guaranteed 10% annual return, unless the company goes public earlier. Ripple can also repurchase the shares at these intervals but must pay a 25% annualised return (AU$192.5 million) if it chooses to do so.
Additionally, the deal contained a liquidation-preference clause prioritising new investors over existing shareholders in the event of bankruptcy or a company sale.
Related: Ripple CEO Predicts Bitcoin Will Hit $180K by 2026, Citing Regulatory Momentum
XRP Shapes Investor Decisions
XRP remains central to Ripple’s valuation. Investor assessments indicated that approximately 90% of the firm’s net assets were derived from the cryptocurrency. The company held US$124 billion (AU$191 billion) in XRP as of July, largely under lockups or scheduled releases. Even after XRP’s decline of more than 40% from its July peak, the token holdings still exceeded the share-sale valuation.
Ripple has also pursued acquisitions and new business lines, including Hidden Road for US$1.25 billion (AU$1.925 billion), GTreasury for US$1 billion (AU$1.54 billion), and the launch of a U.S. prime brokerage. Its stablecoin RLUSD further diversifies operations. These moves highlight the company’s efforts to balance growth ambitions with the structured obligations embedded in the funding round.
By embedding fixed-return provisions and repurchase rights, the deal illustrates a blending of venture capital and structured finance strategies, reflecting a broader trend in institutional engagement with crypto markets.
Related: Securitize CEO: Tokenisation Doesn’t Magically Make Illiquid Assets Liquid
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Filed under: Bitcoin - @ December 9, 2025 4:56 am