Ripple Shifts Strategy to Decentralize XRP Ledger Funding
Ripple moves to a decentralized funding model for the XRP Ledger after $550M in investments, targeting institutional growth and ZK-proof integration.
Ripple is restructuring the way it supports development on the XRP Ledger, moving from a centralized grant model to a distributed network of funding entities. The company describes this shift as a reflection of the ecosystem’s maturity, following investments of over $550 million into approximately 200 projects since 2017.
A major milestone for XRPL. The Permissioned DEX is now live, allowing regulated participants to access on-ledger liquidity while the open DEX continues to operate as it always has.
— Dennis Jarosch (@dennisjarosch) February 18, 2026
By building policy controls directly into the protocol, the XRPL can support regulated liquidity… https://t.co/apD753699w
At the core of this new architecture is the XRPL Funding Hub—a portal consolidating grant opportunities and developer incentives from multiple independent entities. XAO DAO will manage the distribution of micro-grants through community voting, while regional organizations such as XRPL Commons and XRP Asia take on expanded roles in connecting local developers with capital and institutional partners.
Institutional Infrastructure and Confidential Transactions
On the institutional side, Ripple is positioning the XRPL as infrastructure for regulated finance. The planned integration of ZK-proofs would enable confidential transactions that meet compliance requirements, while the proposed XLS-66 protocol would introduce structured lending tools directly to the network, targeting banks and asset managers.
Ripple’s stablecoin, RLUSD, is expanding to Ethereum Layer 2 networks, including Base and Optimism, with Japan identified as a priority market in the near future. Japan is also positioning itself as one of the leading hubs for top crypto exchanges and digital assets.
Institutional Trust and Price Forecasts
Tokenized assets on the XRPL have reached approximately $2.3 billion—of which $1.3 billion was added in 2026 alone. Among the entities utilizing Ripple’s infrastructure, European institutions, including Deutsche Bank, have been reported.
CEO Brad Garlinghouse cautioned against expecting a single breakout catalyst, describing growing adoption as a steady accumulation of banking integrations moving from pilot to production phases. Venture funds such as Pantera, Dragonfly, and Franklin Templeton are now directly backing startups building on the network, reducing reliance on Ripple as the sole institutional sponsor.
Analyst price targets for XRP by the end of the year range from a base case of $1.60 to $2.45, with an optimistic scenario of $8.00—depending on macroeconomic conditions and ETF dynamics.
However, technical analysts warn that a break below the $1.30 support level could open the door to levels below $1.00, citing weakening retail participation and competition from networks like Solana.

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