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Ripple's Full-Stack Tokenization Rails

Plus, the SEC says stablecoins are good as "cash"

Hello Real World!

I’m Chris (@storaker) — Another week that felt like a switch flipping on. On one side, the SEC gave corporates a path to treat USD stablecoins as cash & cash equivalents, lowering yet another barrier for their use. On the other, Ripple with all legal overhangs gone, emerged with a surprisingly coherent, enterprise-friendly tokenization stack.

Let’s get real.

Top stories this week

Ripple: From XRP brand to full-stack settlement. With the SEC case closed, Ripple is packaging a usable stack for tokenization: RLUSD + XRPL with BNY Mellon as reserve custodian; an agreement to acquire Rail for cross-border pay-ins/payouts and treasury automation; and a move to acquire Hidden Road for prime-broker connectivity—plus bank-charter ambitions.

SEC: When stablecoins count as “cash”. SEC staff issued interim guidance that lets fully reserved, USD-pegged stablecoins with same-day, at-par redemption for the holder be booked as cash & cash equivalents under U.S. GAAP. This makes for easier approvals for stablecoin payables/receivables, cross-border sweeps, and weekend payouts, with a premium on open, transparent, auditor-grade designs.

Ripple’s Full-Stack Play

Asset issuance → Settlement → Disbursement

So, What’s up

Why this matters

Tokenized funds, credit, and repo all hinge on a predictable USD leg. RLUSD’s posture: Ethereum for composability, XRPL for native corridors, and BNY Mellon on reserves, gives enterprise teams something they can spec into workflows without much headaches.

The Rail deal is telling. It provides pipes: virtual accounts, cross-border pay-ins/payouts, reconciliation, and treasury automation.

A stablecoin that settles trades is useful; a stablecoin that also runs payables, receivables, vendor payouts, and consumer disbursements closes the loop from tokenized assets to money moving off-chain.

This makes a Ripple a credible challenger in the USD tokenization leg, as Circle continues to scales with enterprise partners (networks, PSPs) and banks like JPMorgan push forward deposit-token pilots.

Execution risks and the openness question

Ripple’s legal cloud gone, its emerging stablecoin and tokenization infrastructure, and the potential for a bank charter and master account all bode well, but in this business network effects matter and Ethereum is still the indisputable stablecoin and RWA winner.

The good news is that open finance makes it easier to integrate with larger ecosystems 88% of RLUSD is issued on Ethereum and launched an EVM sidechain less than two months ago.

If Ripple keeps RLUSD on public rails, has auditor-grade custody/redemptions, and uses Rail /Hidden Road so distribution and liquidity show up in the venues teams already use then it can become a serious contender in the stablecoin race.

When Stablecoins Count as “Cash”

The SEC issued interim guidance that provides corporates with a credible path to book some USD stablecoins as cash & cash equivalents (CCE) under U.S. GAAP. It requires that the token be fully reserved, USD-pegged, and that the holder have an enforceable, on-demand right to redeem at $1, backed by low-risk, liquid reserves — in other words GENIUS Act compliant.

What it is

This is staff guidance (not a FASB rewrite), so auditors will apply it case by case—but “auditor-credible” is the difference between a pilot and a rollout.

For corporate teams, it removes a long-standing blocker: if balances can live in CCE instead of “other assets,” liquidity ratios and cash-tied covenants stop tripping stablecoin settlement for payables/receivables, cross-border sweeps, marketplaces, and weekend payouts. This, in turn, makes it easier for PSPs, networks, and remitters to sell stablecoin settlement: less prefunding, later cut-offs, and true weekend ops without setting off accounting alarms.

Accounting finally matching the operational story brings fresh tailwinds to enterprise adoption, from Corpay embedding USDC in pay-ins/payouts and card workflows to networks like Visa expanding multi-coin, multi-chain settlement.

What it isn’t — yet

This is not universal, not prudential relief, and not tax relief.

Algorithmic or yield-bearing designs, non-USD pegs, and fiat-backed coins without enforceable end-holder redemption will typically fail CCE. Capital, margin, and broker-dealer custody rules are unchanged, so don’t expect loan value just because something sits in CCE. For U.S. tax, stablecoins are still property, so spending one is a disposition (often a rounding-error gain/loss, but still reportable).

Internationally, IFRS hasn’t updated IAS 7 (cash-flow standard), so expect case-by-case outcomes there until the IASB takes up a project.

A quick history lesson explains the cautionary boundaries.In 2008, two ‘cash-like’ markets snapped: the Reserve Primary money-market fund ‘broke the buck’ and froze withdrawals, and auction-rate securities auctions failed, locking investors in. Rules and accounting got tougher. Bottom line: labels follow liquidity.

What’s next

Coins with end-holder redemption, segregated, transparent reserves, and regular attestations now have a commercial edge: they don’t just feel safer—they make a CFO’s balance sheet cleaner.

However, for true ‘cash-like’ redeamability to take hold at scale, there’s stronger need for interoperable redemption. Projects like Ubyx are efforts aimed squarely at this: building multi-issuer, multi-chain clearing layer that nets flows across issuers, coordinates on-chain mint/burn to keep supply aligned, and uses common rules (membership, liquidity buffers, loss waterfalls) to contain stress without freezing payouts for any covered stablecoin.

The SEC staff has opened a holder-level path today; building this into a shared interoperable is crucial for a world of interoperable rails over walled gardens.

Other stories worth your time

Tokenization + Markets

Galaxy to tokenize its own equity. Galaxy filed to make GLXY stock available via Superstate’s onchain funds infra—an issuer-led experiment that, if approved, puts primary equity exposure on rails tokenization teams actually use. 

First pullback in tokenized Treasuries. After months of relentless growth, July saw net outflows led by BlackRock’s BUIDL (~$447M over 30 days), per RWA.xyz trackers.

Policy + Jurisdictions

Hong Kong’s Stablecoin Ordinance is live. HKMA’s new regime requires a license to issue fiat-referenced coins; officials signal a small initial cohort and heavy KYC expectations, with first licenses early 2026. Standard Chartered + Animoca + HKT formed Anchorpoint Financial to apply. 

South Korea: tokenized-securities law + stablecoin push. Lawmakers advanced updates to the Electronic Securities Act/Capital Markets Act to recognize DLT record-keeping, while KakaoBank said it will actively participate in KRW stablecoin issuance/custody. 

BIS flags stablecoin cross-border spillovers. The BIS Annual Economic Report urges tighter, coordinated stablecoin oversight given rising cross-border flows and links to short-term dollar markets. 

Payments + Rails

Visa widens stablecoin settlement. Adds Stellar and Avalanche, plus support for PYUSD, USDG, and EURC—broadening choice for merchants and PSPs planning multi-coin cut-overs. 

Corpay x Circle. Corpay will embed USDC across FX pay-ins/payouts and commercial card rails—bringing stablecoin settlement into mainstream treasury workflows. 

Remitly goes live in Sept. with stablecoin payouts via Bridge (Stripe) and a Remitly Wallet to hold USD/stablecoins—distribution that matters for real users at the edge. 

Paxos clears decks with NYDFS; USDG distribution grows. Paxos settled legacy Binance issues with NYDFS; meanwhile Gate joined the Global Dollar Network to push USDG across venues. 

Coinbase adds a fee on big USDC off-ramps. Starting Aug 13, a 0.1% fee applies to USDC→USD conversions over $5M (30-day net)—a small number with big implications for treasury routing. 

See you next week and keep it real.

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Tips, corrections, rants? Let me know (@storaker), or contact the editors at [email protected].