Ripple is making a direct push into institutional finance. Its brokerage arm, Ripple Prime, has been added to the directory of the National Securities Clearing Corporation, a subsidiary of Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation. The NSCC processes and clears U.S. securities trades, acting as a backbone for Wall Street’s post-trade activity.
This listing is not symbolic. It allows Ripple Prime to connect its services to traditional financial systems and potentially move significant post-trade operations onto the XRP Ledger. The development follows Ripple’s acquisition of Hidden Road, a brokerage firm that previously processed $3 trillion annually for more than 300 institutional clients.
Ripple had stated earlier that Hidden Road’s post-trade infrastructure would eventually migrate to the XRP Ledger. That shift is designed to cut costs and speed up settlement times, two persistent pain points in traditional finance.
Ripple’s Chief Technology Officer, David Schwartz, described the milestone as “important,” signaling confidence in the ledger’s readiness for large-scale institutional flows.
Institutional Volume Expands on XRPL
The timing reflects growing institutional adoption. Just last month, French banking giant Société Générale launched a euro-denominated stablecoin on the XRP Ledger. This marked another example of a regulated financial institution building directly on blockchain rails.
Ripple Prime aims to use the XRP Ledger’s speed and lower transaction costs to modernize settlement. Traditional clearing systems can take days to finalize trades. Blockchain-based settlement can occur in seconds, reducing counterparty risk and operational expense.
Additional upgrades are in development. Reports indicate that options trading capabilities for institutions are being prepared on the XRP Ledger platform. If implemented, this would expand the range of financial products available and deepen liquidity.
Key institutional facts:
- Hidden Road processed $3 trillion per year
- Over 300 institutional clients served
- Société Générale launched a euro stablecoin on XRPL
- Options trading tools planned for institutions
Developers Warn of Rising Scams

While institutional adoption grows, developers are urging caution. XRPL developer Wietse Wind recently warned users about scams targeting wallet holders.
One common tactic involves scammers sending fake NFTs. They create misleading offers, hoping users will approve transactions without checking details. In other cases, scammers copy legitimate NFT offers and remint them from different wallets to trick buyers.
Another frequent threat is fake customer support. Fraudsters pose as helpers and request private seed phrases or ask users to sign transactions. Genuine support teams never request this information.
Developers advise users to:
- Cancel suspicious NFT offers
- Never share seed phrases
- Avoid signing unknown transactions
Ripple’s strategy is clear: attract institutional capital while strengthening security for retail users. The success of this dual approach could determine how far the XRP Ledger advances in global finance.


