
Ripple vs. SEC Lawsuit Closure: What it Means for the Future of Crypto
Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse made a triumphant announcement on March 19, indicating that the US Securities and Exchange Commission had dropped its latest appeal in the legal case between the two entities, which essentially meant it had finally ended.His statement was laterconfirmedby company CLO Stuart Alderoty, who explained that Ripple had also dropped its own appeal. Moreover, the company had to pay just $50 million, instead of the $125 million Judge Torres ruled or the $2 billion the SEC sought initially.Garlinghouse described this as a win not only for his firm but the entire cryptocurrency industry, given the lawsuitâs significance and longevity. But is that really the case? We decided to ask a few industry experts for their opinion on the potential impact of the lawsuitâs closure.Watershed MomentLingling Jiang, a partner of DWF Labs, was bullish overall for crypto after the case was resolved. She said the ending of such a lawsuit, that lasted for over four years and was essentially the cornerstone of the SECâs entire war against crypto, is a âwatershed momentâ for the company and for the entire industry.She believes it marks the beginning of a long process that will help crypto receive more regulatory clarity in the States, which would be âcrucial for building long-term institutional trust and driving innovation.âWith the burden of such a long, expensive, and potentially very damaging lawsuit out of sight, Jiang said Ripple can now focus on building its own brand, business, technology, and products, such as its recently launched stablecoin.âI would regard this as a representation of what meaningful progression towards establishing greater legitimacy and institutional acceptance within the cryptocurrency ecosystem can look like,â she concluded.US-based Firms to ThriveEchoing in part Jiangâs words and a previouscommentfrom Garlinghouse about US-based companies, Andrei Grachev, a managing partner at Falcon Finance, said such digital asset projects are now âpositioning themselves to regain leadership in crypto infrastructure.âRippleâs legal clarity, Coinbase reportedly working on acquiring Deribit, and other similar developments on US soil point to an âincredibly bullishâ future for synthetic dollar protocols.âIf a regulated, U.S.-compliant Coinbase absorbs Deribit, it could accelerate the legitimisation of on-chain synthetic dollar marketsâparticularly those that mirror the risk profiles of traditional FX and interest rate derivatives.With deeper market rails and renewed confidence in regulatory clarity, we expect innovation and adoption in synthetic dollar protocols to surgeâespecially in regions hungry for stable, censorship-resistant value transfer,â â Grachev said.