Ripple’s Historic Leap: From Amex to DTCC, Re-Engineering Wall Street’s Post-Trade Infrastructure
Ripple Prime has been formally integrated into the core clearing infrastructure of Wall Street, with its addition to the DTCC's NSCC participant directory effective March 2, 2026. The institutional prime brokerage arm, built on Ripple's $1.25 billion acquisition of Hidden Road, now holds clearing broker code 0443 and executing broker alpha HRFI, granting XRP-linked infrastructure direct access to the U.S. clearing rails that process over $2 quadrillion in transactions annually—a definitive move from the financial periphery to the operational heart of traditional finance.
What Ripple Prime Actually Does Inside DTCC’s Clearing Stack
Ripple Prime sits inside the NSCC as a clearing and executing broker – not as a vendor, not as a technology partner, but as a participant with operational credentials.
That distinction matters because NSCC membership confers direct access to centralized clearing, risk management, and settlement services that form the post-trade backbone of U.S. equity and OTC markets.
The mechanics work as follows: Ripple Prime can now route institutional post-trade volumes directly onto the XRP Ledger, combining NSCC’s risk and settlement framework with XRPL’s settlement finality – measured in seconds, not the T+1 or T+2 cycles that currently lock capital in legacy pipelines. The dormant capital problem, where trillions sit idle during settlement delays, is precisely what this architecture targets.
Ripple #XRP IT’S OFFICIAL! DTCC Added Ripple Prime to NSCC! LIVE INTEGRATION 2026!
EPIC #CRYPTO NEWS pic.twitter.com/WYdYDstku0
Ripple Prime’s service stack covers clearing, financing, OTC spot trading for XRP and RLUSD stablecoins, and prime services across both traditional and crypto assets under a single operational roof. RLUSD functions as a compliant liquidity bridge alongside XRP – giving institutional counterparties a dollar-denominated settlement instrument that runs natively on XRPL. This is Wall Street automation applied to the post-trade layer that has resisted it longest.
“Seems important.” – David Schwartz, Ripple CTO, on the NSCC listing
Schwartz’s brevity is deliberate. The NSCC listing represents a convergence of three discrete buildout phases: DTCC’s 2025 patent filings provided the architectural blueprint naming Ripple and XRPL as compatible infrastructure; the Hidden Road acquisition added clearing capability and regulatory standing; and the March 2026 NSCC listing established the live connectivity. Each step was load-bearing. None was sufficient alone.
Hidden Road already clears approximately $3 trillion annually. With NSCC membership, that volume now has a pathway onto XRPL settlement rails – the first time a crypto-native firm has held this position in the U.S. post-trade stack.
From xCurrent to NSCC: The Institutional Credibility Arc
In 2017, American Express partnered with Ripple to power real-time cross-border payment messaging between the U.S. and U.K. using xCurrent – Ripple’s enterprise messaging protocol. The partnership was real, but xCurrent was middleware. It sat adjacent to settlement infrastructure, not inside it.
That was Ripple as a payment messaging vendor. What exists now is categorically different.
This is the moment I've been watching for with $XRP
SWIFT announced they're adding a blockchain-based shared ledger for real-time 24/7 cross-border payments. Over 30 banks from 16 countries are designing it. And I went through the list.
12 of those banks have confirmed Ripple… pic.twitter.com/uaB2cL1A2g
The progression from the Amex partnership through RippleNet’s global bank network, through the SEC lawsuit and its resolution, through the Hidden Road acquisition, to the NSCC listing follows a documented institutional logic: each move extended Ripple’s reach one layer deeper into regulated financial infrastructure. Ripple crossed from payments technology into systemic clearing infrastructure in March 2026. The Amex partnership was proof of concept for institutional engagement. The NSCC listing is proof of systemic integration.
DTCC’s 2025 patent filings – which explicitly named Ripple and XRPL alongside Bitcoin, Ethereum, Hedera Hashgraph, and several other networks – established the technical framework for this integration months before it went live.
The patents described hierarchical control structures, cross-ledger liquidity tokens, and bridge architectures with DTCC positioned as middleware. Ripple Prime’s NSCC listing is the first live instantiation of that framework. The DTCC integration is not an isolated event. It is the logical next step in a sequence that began nine years ago on a transatlantic payments corridor.