- Ripple is now begging the Central Bank of Brazil for a license, hoping to finally stop being a “technology vendor” and start being a real player… or at least a less suspicious one.
- Banks and fintechs including Banco Genial, Braza Bank, and Nomad are using Ripple’s infrastructure for same-day dollar transfers, real-backed stablecoins, and cross-border fund flows. Because nothing says “sophisticated banking” like tokenizing your grandma’s recipe for feijoada.
- For Ripple and XRP watchers, Brazil is the ultimate test case: can XRP-ledger rails survive the litigious storm of the U.S. and still make a splash in Brazil’s crypto scene? Spoiler: probably not, but let’s try anyway.
Ripple (XRP) is stepping up its Latin American strategy, moving to formalize its presence in Brazil’s regulated crypto market while quietly deepening real-world payment and tokenization rails in the country. The company said it plans to apply for a Virtual Asset Service Provider (VASP) license from the Central Bank of Brazil, a move that would pull its local operations directly under the country’s evolving crypto framework. Because nothing says “trust us, we’re legit” like a government stamp of approval.
The push comes as several Brazilian financial institutions are already plugged into Ripple’s infrastructure for cross-border flows and on-chain settlement. Investment bank Banco Genial uses Ripple’s network to process same-day dollar transfers, effectively turning the ledger into back-end plumbing for faster FX and remittance rails. Because who needs a mortgage when you can have a crypto mortgage?
Fintech firm Nomad is also using Ripple’s network for stablecoin-based fund flows between Brazil and the U.S., positioning XRP-ledger rails as an alternative to traditional correspondent banking in a corridor notorious for fees and friction. Because nothing says “innovation” like replacing a 1980s-era banking system with a blockchain that’s basically a digital version of a paper clip.
If granted, a VASP license would effectively turn Ripple from a quasi-grey “technology vendor” into a supervised participant in Brazil’s digital asset regime. That matters for institutions that want crypto-adjacent yield, remittance efficiency, or tokenization upside but remain unwilling to touch unlicensed infrastructure. Because trust is a commodity, and Ripple’s is running low.
For XRP and broader market watchers, the Brazil pivot is another sign that Ripple’s post-U.S.-litigation strategy leans heavily on jurisdictions where payment use cases, not speculative trading, are the headline. If Ripple can secure a VASP license and scale real-world flows through banks like Genial and Braza, Brazil could become one of the key test beds for whether XRP-ledger infrastructure can matter beyond courtrooms and secondary-market narratives. Because nothing says “we’re serious” like a license and a bunch of lawsuits.
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2026-03-17 23:34