The whitepaper highlights fragmented crypto markets and cites failures like FTX as risk examples.
Ripple’s Digital Prime Broker centralizes execution, liquidity, and credit with daily netting to cut counterparty exposure.
XRP Ledger enables on-chain credit lines, faster settlement, and near real-time exposure tracking.
Ripple released a new institutional whitepaper, according to market analyst Diana. Titled The Blueprint for Institutional Digital Asset Trading, the document explains how banks and funds can trade crypto. The paper was published publicly and outlines why current institutional crypto workflows create risk and how Ripple proposes addressing them.
According to the whitepaper, large institutions face fragmented crypto market structures today. Notably, banks and hedge funds must open accounts across several exchanges. They also move funds between venues and manage isolated credit lines.
As a result, institutions face operational strain and heightened counterparty exposure. The document points to past exchange failures, including FTX, as examples of concentrated risk. One platform failure can freeze assets and disrupt trading operations.
Against this backdrop, Ripple frames its proposal as a response to existing market mechanics. The whitepaper focuses on structure rather than market expansion. This approach sets the stage for a centralized operational model.
Ripple introduces a Digital Prime Broker, or DPB, framework. Under this structure, one prime broker manages execution, liquidity access, and credit. Importantly, trades across venues can be netted at the end of each day.
This model reduces the amount of capital institutions must pre-fund. It also limits direct exposure to multiple trading counterparties. As described, the broker aggregates liquidity while monitoring credit in one system.
The whitepaper explains that daily netting lowers settlement friction. Therefore, institutions can manage positions more efficiently. This design leads directly into Ripple’s blockchain-based settlement proposal.
Ripple proposes using the XRP Ledger within the DPB structure. The ledger would support on-chain credit lines and faster settlement cycles. Earlier netting would also become possible.
According to the paper, on-chain processes improve transaction transparency. Institutions can track exposures in near real time. Operational overhead also declines compared to legacy settlement systems.
Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse has stated that Ripple aims to work alongside banks. Separately, Ripple has partnered with Aviva Investors on fund structures using the XRP Ledger.
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