Enterprise cryptocurrency company Ripple has announced $200 million in investment funding, which brings the total value of the blockchain technology company to $10 billion, according to reports.
The seven-year-old, San Francisco-based company created the XRP cryptocurrency, the Ripple payment protocol and the RippleNet exchange network in order to disintermediate cross-border financial transactions for financial services businesses.
The technology enables the representation of digital currency (a “stable coin”) backed by traditional fiat money, or the creation of cryptocurrencies (a new asset class), enabling new sources of liquidity. Those digital assets are transmitted across a decentralized network where transactions are recorded on an immutable blockchain ledger.
Anyone with a cryptographic key and an internet connection can receive, hold, and send XRP to anyone else over the Ripple blockchain network.
“As others in the blockchain space have slowed their growth or even shut down, we have accelerated our momentum and industry leadership throughout 2019,” Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse said in a statement.
In June, Ripple penned a deal for a 10% stake in remittance firm MoneyGram, which adopted RippleNet’s xRapid on-demand liquidity settlement system. The system eliminates the need for banks to hold funds in accounts for settlement purposes; Ripple claims to bring settlement times down from up to two days to three seconds.
Unlike other cryptocurrencies, such as Ethereum’s ETH, XRP tokens are pre-mined, meaning all the coins that will ever exist have been created. Ripple created 100 billion XRP coins, but the primary company and Ripple Labs — the subsidiary that created the payment protocol and exchange network — own 60% of the tokens.
Ripple has succeeded over many other cryptocurrencies for cross-border payments for several reasons, according to Avivah Litan, a vice president of research for Gartner.
For one, Ripple has been around longer than others. In fact, it’s the oldest and as such has “first mover” advantage. It is also well funded, allowing the company to innovate and expand.
“Ripple supports the only fully working distributed ledger platform that enables all types of cross-border payments using cryptocurrencies and stablecoins,” Litan said.
SWIFT is Ripple’s main competitor, but many other giants including Facebook, J.P. Morgan, MasterCard, Visa, and sovereign national banks such as the People’s Bank of China, Bank of France, and various central banks of Europe cooperating and working together will soon challenge Ripple’s dominance in this area. Financial services tech firms such as Square will also challenge Ripple, according to Litan.
“These competitors have different business and technology models than Ripple does, but the question is who will own the customer’s interface with cryptocurrency distributed ledgers that support distributed ledger payments?” Litan said. “Over time, and likely by 2022, Ripple’s first-mover advantage will erode as these competitive efforts come to market.”
This year in particular, cryptocurrencies have come into the spotlight after companies such as Facebook and J.P. Morgan threw their hats into the blockchain ring, announcing efforts to launch their own cryptocurrencies backed by cash.
J.P. Morgan launched JPM Coin for internal use in cross-border financial settlement.
Facebook announced it would create Libra, enabling users to make PayPal-like purchases of advertised products and authenticate people posting on the site, effectively creating an audit trail and confirming they’re not bots.
While details are few, the reports based on unnamed sources claim Facebook’s cryptocurrency would allow users of its WhatsApp messaging platform to send money to contacts, similar to how Venmo and PayPal allow cross-border payments; the difference is that there would be no middleman (i.e., a central bank or clearing firm).
In October, Ripple announced the number of users of RippleNet had passed 300 financial services firms, including players such as American Express, PNC, and Santander.
“As the global economy becomes increasingly digital, the need for real-time payments globally is critical,” Chris Ward, executive vice president for PNC Treasury Management, said in a statement. “We are focused on providing our clients with capabilities that enable making secure digital payments in an instant, whether they are sent across the street or across the world.”
Copyright © 2019 IDG Communications, Inc.