Ripple Prime Gains Issuer Ratings on Strong Capital Position, XRP Holdings

ripple prime gains issuer ratings strong capital position xrp holdings thumbnail

Ripple Prime, the institutional prime brokerage arm of Ripple, has received investment-grade issuer ratings from KBRA, with the rating agency pointing to the parent company’s strong capital position, including nearly $5 billion in cash and more than 40 billion XRP units.

What Issuer Ratings Ripple Prime Received

The ratings action, published on April 2, 2026, assigned BBB issuer ratings to both Ripple Prime CIV US BD HoldCo LLC and Hidden Road Partners CIV US LLC. A BBB rating sits in the investment-grade tier, signaling that KBRA views the entities as having adequate capacity to meet their financial commitments.

KBRA Issuer Rating
BBB
KBRA assigned BBB issuer ratings to Ripple Prime CIV US BD HoldCo LLC and Hidden Road Partners CIV US LLC.

The designation makes Ripple Prime one of the few crypto-affiliated entities to hold an investment-grade credit rating from a nationally recognized statistical rating organization. For institutional counterparties that require rated intermediaries, the BBB grade could open new prime brokerage and clearing channels.

KBRA identified Ripple Prime US as an SEC-registered broker-dealer, a CFTC-registered futures commission merchant, and a member of FINRA, SIPC, CME Group clearing, and the FICC Government Securities Division. That stack of registrations places Ripple Prime US under the same regulatory umbrella as traditional Wall Street broker-dealers, a distinction that separates it from most crypto-native trading desks.

Why the Rating Agency Cited a Strong Capital Position

KBRA’s rationale leaned heavily on the “strong capital position” at the parent level. The agency noted that Ripple maintained nearly $5.0 billion in cash and more than 40 billion XRP units as of the third quarter of 2025, which it treated as important parental financial backing for the rated subsidiaries.

Capital Support Cited By KBRA
$5.0B cash + 40B XRP
KBRA framed Ripple's cash position and XRP holdings as important parental financial backing behind the issuer ratings.

An important distinction: those cash and XRP reserves sit on Ripple’s balance sheet, not on the rated subsidiaries’ own books. KBRA’s framework treats parent-level resources as a backstop, not as direct assets of the rated entity.

The agency also noted that Ripple injected approximately $500 million into the business following its late-2025 acquisition of Hidden Road, and that Ripple Prime achieved profitability in 2025 after those capital injections. KBRA further stated that Ripple Prime maintains substantial excess net capital relative to SEC requirements.

That profitability milestone, combined with the regulatory registrations and parental backing, formed the core of KBRA’s rationale. The agency described the business as still in a scaling phase, a caveat suggesting it sees growth potential but recognizes the revenue base is still maturing. The rating reflects confidence in parental support and regulatory positioning more than standalone earnings power at this stage, arriving as the broader market digests developments such as upcoming Federal Reserve leadership hearings that could reshape institutional sentiment.

How XRP Holdings Shaped the Ratings Narrative

The explicit mention of XRP holdings in a credit rating rationale is unusual. Rating agencies typically assess capital adequacy using cash, liquid securities, and committed credit lines. By including Ripple’s more than 40 billion XRP units alongside its cash position, KBRA signaled that it considers the token holdings material to parent-level financial strength.

That framing carries nuance. XRP is part of the broader capital story KBRA used to evaluate parental support, but it was not the sole factor. The agency weighed it alongside the cash position, the regulatory registrations, the post-acquisition capital injections, and the firm’s path to profitability.

For XRP market observers, the inclusion is meaningful because it represents a traditional credit agency treating a digital asset as a component of corporate financial strength. At the time of KBRA’s 3Q25 assessment, those holdings represented a significant store of value, though their market price fluctuates.

The rated entities trace back to Ripple’s acquisition of Hidden Road, which closed in late 2025. Ripple announced in October 2025 that Hidden Road had been rebranded as Ripple Prime, making Ripple the first crypto company to own and operate a global, multi-asset prime broker. The company said the business had grown by 3X since the acquisition announcement.

The dual naming in the rating, covering both Ripple Prime CIV US BD HoldCo LLC and Hidden Road Partners CIV US LLC, reflects the transitional corporate structure. As crypto firms increasingly seek institutional credibility, the path Ripple has taken mirrors broader industry efforts to build regulated financial infrastructure, similar to how projects focused on blockchain infrastructure and real-world asset platforms are positioning for institutional adoption.

Whether the BBB designation translates into measurable business gains, particularly in attracting institutional clearing and prime brokerage clients who require rated counterparties, will depend on execution in the quarters ahead.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

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