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Home Blockchain

Ripple quietly appears inside Wall Street’s stock-clearing system as it expands XRP payments platform

by DigestWire member
March 5, 2026
in Blockchain, Crypto Market, Cryptocurrency
0
Ripple quietly appears inside Wall Street’s stock-clearing system as it expands XRP payments platform
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Ripple is sharpening its argument that it can help institutions move value across traditional rails, stablecoins, and blockchain networks.

On March 2, DTCC’s National Securities Clearing Corporation updated its MPID directory to add Ripple-owned “Hidden Road Partners CIV US LLC” for its first trade. The entry appears under the OTC column.

A day later, Ripple said its payments business is now “end-to-end,” covering the full lifecycle “from collection to payout” for both fiat and stablecoin flows.

Ripple said it added managed custody and collections powered by virtual accounts, and linked the expansion to two acquisitions, Palisade (custody and treasury automation) and Rail (virtual accounts and collections).

These separate announcements touch different parts of the financial stack, including post-trade plumbing on one side and cross-border payments operations on the other.

Together, they read like a bid to make Ripple’s institutional story easier to understand in operational terms: payments origination and treasury tooling on the front end, and compatibility with the identifiers and participant records used by legacy market infrastructure on the back end.

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Hidden Road’s NSCC listing adds visibility inside legacy directories

The NSCC sits at the center of US post-trade clearing, an area that usually stays out of view unless a disruption forces attention.

It is drawing more focus this year because traditional market infrastructure is preparing for longer operating hours and faster processing, changes that require more coordination across participants and systems.

DTCC has said the NSCC’s clearing-hours expansion is expected to support 24×5 operations in the second quarter of 2026.

Reuters has also reported that DTCC plans to support 24-hour US equities clearing by the second quarter of 2026, pending approvals.

Those efforts are part of a broader shift toward extended-hours markets, putting pressure on the back office to keep pace.

In that context, an MPID directory entry is not about marketing. It is about being legible to the systems and institutions that already use them to route trades, manage counterparties, and keep post-trade workflows consistent.

Directories and standardized participant records are basic, often unglamorous components of how firms reduce operational errors. They help institutions know who they are facing and how to process activity through established channels.

The update does not mean DTCC has adopted blockchain settlement, and the directory entry alone does not signal broad DTCC integration beyond what is shown in the notice.

It does, however, show a Ripple-owned entity appearing in a mainstream post-trade directory, which aligns with its recent push to present itself as built for institutional workflows.

Notably, Ripple had acquired the multi-asset prime broker last year as part of its efforts to sit closer to traditional finance, by providing prime brokerage services and connections to established market infrastructure.

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Payments goes “end-to-end” as stablecoin volume and real usage diverge

Ripple’s payments announcement targets a different constraint, one that sits at the intersection of stablecoin enthusiasm and day-to-day treasury and finance work.

Stablecoins have grown into a large share of on-chain activity, but that activity does not automatically translate into real-world payments.

McKinsey, working with Artemis Analytics, estimated “actual stablecoin payments” at about $390 billion annualized in 2025. It argued that commonly cited on-chain transaction volumes can overstate real payments because the totals include trading, internal transfers, and automated blockchain activity.

Notably, McKinsey’s analysis estimated that actual stablecoin payments accounted for roughly 0.02% of global payment volume.

That gap can be read as a warning to anyone treating stablecoin growth as proof that mainstream payments adoption is already here.

It can also be read as an opening for companies that can make stablecoins easier to use inside existing corporate workflows, where compliance, controls, reconciliation, and predictable settlement matter more than raw transaction counts.

Ripple is aiming at that opening with packaging rather than a single product. The company said the expanded platform allows customers to “collect, hold, exchange, and payout” in both fiat and stablecoins in one workflow.

Ripple framed its managed custody and virtual account collections as tools that reduce operational friction, especially for companies that currently stitch together multiple providers across regions and time zones.

Virtual accounts are designed to make collections more manageable, particularly for businesses that need to reconcile incoming payments at scale. Managed custody addresses another barrier, the question of where digital assets are held and how custody is integrated into governance, reporting, and risk controls.

By presenting these functions on the same platform, Ripple is effectively saying that stablecoin payments will not scale through tokens alone. They will scale through the surrounding services that corporate finance teams require before routing meaningful volume.

Ripple also emphasized its existing footprint and licensing posture. The company said Ripple Payments is live in more than 60 markets, has processed more than $100 billion in volume, and that it holds more than 75 licenses and money transmitter registrations, including a New York Department of Financial Services trust charter.

Those claims are meant to address a recurring objection to stablecoin payments: that compliance and regulatory alignment are too fragmented for broad enterprise adoption.

Essentially, Ripple is presenting its payments platform as a regulated, operations-first product rather than a crypto-native tool that treasury teams must adapt to.

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XRP’s role is easier to sell when it is optional, not mandatory

Placed side by side, the updates outline a structure Ripple can pitch to institutions without forcing the narrative to revolve around the XRP token.

One layer is fiat access, where collections and payouts happen in currencies that compliance teams already manage. Another layer is stablecoins, which can serve as operational cash within workflows for treasury movement, liquidity management, and reconciliation.

The third layer is XRP and the XRP Ledger (XRPL), which are presented as an option that can be used where it helps, rather than a rail that must be used for every flow.

Ripple did not explicitly make that pitch in the two March announcements. Still, the combination of end-to-end payment tooling and a post-trade visibility step creates a cleaner lane for XRP to appear as part of a broader suite, instead of as the center of it.

The argument Ripple can make is based on working-capital math. Liquidity needs scale with flow volume and time-in-transit. When transfers settle faster, the need to pre-position funds in multiple locations can shrink, at least at the margin, and liquidity efficiency can improve.

Notably, XRPL documentation says XRP can settle on the ledger in 3 to 5 seconds.

That does not mean institutions will default to XRP for every corridor. Many will prefer fiat rails where they already have established banking relationships, or stablecoins where treasury teams want a stable unit for accounting and risk management.

But Ripple’s approach allows it to frame XRP as one tool among several, available inside a platform that still supports fiat and stablecoins.

For risk committees and operations teams, that framing can matter. Institutions often resist being pushed into a single asset or a single network.

So, a platform that offers optionality can be easier to pilot, even if usage initially concentrates in only a few corridors.

What to watch as Ripple tests its institutional narrative

The near-term test is practical.

On the payments side, the question is whether “end-to-end” translates into measurable enterprise uptake.

That includes whether more customers use stablecoin-funded payouts, whether virtual accounts become a meaningful source of collections activity, and whether Ripple can show repeatable corridor wins that move beyond pilots.

On the market-structure side, the question is how far Hidden Road’s footprint expands within the NSCC ecosystem beyond the specific OTC directory entry shown in the notice.

Directory visibility is a prerequisite, not an outcome. Institutions will care about how that visibility connects to workflows that matter, including clearing processes, settlement timing, and operational controls.

For Ripple’s broader narrative around XRP, the next proof point is the extent to which XRPL-based settlement is used in production alongside fiat and stablecoins.

The March announcements do not claim a major shift in DTCC’s settlement practices, nor do they say that institutions must route payments through any particular asset.

They do show Ripple trying to make its institutional proposition more complete and more compatible with the systems that already dominate finance.

If those pieces land, Ripple’s XRP pitch may read less like a token narrative and more like an attempt to replace narrow parts of back-office infrastructure, spanning collections, custody, liquidity, and settlement, with stablecoins and on-chain rails positioned as tools to reduce time-in-transit and working-capital drag.

The post Ripple quietly appears inside Wall Street’s stock-clearing system as it expands XRP payments platform appeared first on CryptoSlate.

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