Ripple’s $2.7B Buying Spree: XRP’s New Best Friend or Frenemy?

Ripple, the crypto giant with a wallet full of XRP and a shopping cart full of companies, has been busy. Over three years, they’ve spent $2.7 billion on acquisitions, which is more than most people earn in a lifetime. While this might sound like a wild spending spree, the crypto community is left wondering: does this mean XRP is about to skyrocket… or is this just Ripple’s way of pretending they’re not a bank?

Why Ripple Spent $2.7 Billion On Acquisitions

Enter Ledger Man, the XRP equivalent of a conspiracy theorist with a spreadsheet. He claims Ripple’s CEO, Brad Garlinghouse, has been so busy buying companies, he’s probably forgotten what day it is. The list of acquisitions is as impressive as it is baffling: Hidden Road, GTreasury, Metaco-each one a fancy name for a company that now answers to Ripple’s whims. Oh, and Hidden Road is now called Ripple Prime. Because nothing says “institutional” like a rebrand that sounds like a shady dating app.

Garlinghouse’s plan? To bridge the gap between Traditional Finance (TradFi) and Decentralized Finance (DeFi). Which is like saying you’re going to teach your dog to speak French. Meanwhile, Ripple Treasury processed $13 trillion in payments last year-without a single cryptocurrency transaction. Because apparently, crypto is just a phase.

But don’t worry, Ledger Man says Ripple is slowing down. Now they’re just trying to merge all these companies into one big, confusing mess. Because nothing says “innovation” like a 2026 system update that’ll probably crash your computer.

What This Has To Do With XRP

The big question: does any of this help XRP? The answer, according to some crypto fans, is a resounding “no.” While Ripple’s buying spree is impressive, XRP’s price is doing what it always does-sliding like a greased penguin on a banana peel. One person lamented that Ripple’s antics have done “nothing” for XRP, while another claimed token holders are “getting left behind.” Which is poetic, because that’s exactly what happens when you trust a company to hold your coins.

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2026-02-26 00:12