Ripple Prime Is the Fintech Firm’s One-Stop Institutional Trading and Financing Desk

Ripple has completed its purchase of global prime broker Hidden Road and rebranded the business as Ripple Prime, a bundled trading, financing and clearing desk for institutions, the company announced Friday.

Ripple said the newly branded unit’s business has tripled since the initial announcement and that Ripple Prime now serves more than 300 institutional customers with over $3 trillion cleared across markets.

The company positions Ripple Prime as an all-in-one service spanning digital assets, foreign exchange, exchange-traded derivatives, over-the-counter swaps, fixed income clearing and repo, plus precious metals, and cites SOC 2 Type II compliance, real-time risk management and cross-margining.

What prime brokerage means in plain English: For funds and market makers, a prime broker is a one-stop intermediary. Instead of juggling multiple exchanges, lenders and custodians, a client uses a single desk that provides market access, extends financing so trades are not fully pre-funded, handles post-trade clearing and settlement, and aggregates collateral and risk across positions.

In traditional finance, that consolidation can reduce friction and improve balance-sheet efficiency. Ripple says Ripple Prime brings a similar model to digital assets alongside FX and derivatives.

Today’s update follows Ripple’s April 8 announcement that it intended to acquire Hidden Road for $1.25 billion. At the time, Ripple framed the deal as making it the first crypto company to own and operate a global, multi-asset prime broker.

“We are at an inflection point for the next phase of digital asset adoption,” Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse said in an April 8 press release. Hidden Road’s founder Marc Asch said the combination would “unlock significant growth” by adding licenses and risk capital, according to the same release.

Ripple also says the prime-brokerage unit will deepen the role of RLUSD, its U.S. dollar stablecoin. The fintech firm says some derivatives clients already hold balances in RLUSD and use it as collateral for prime-brokerage products.

Ripple has previously named BNY Mellon as RLUSD’s primary reserve custodian and pointed to an “A” rating from researcher Bluechip in July 2024 for stability, governance and asset backing.

The launch of Ripple Prime extends Ripple’s institutional push beyond payments and custody into a broader set of broker-dealer-like services that large trading firms expect.

Whether assets and collateral migrate at scale will depend on client demand, market conditions and how Ripple Prime performs against incumbent prime brokers in both crypto and FX. For now, Ripple’s pitch to institutions is a single venue for access, financing and risk controls, with the possibility of using a company-issued stablecoin as collateral.