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Ripple Nearly Shut Down Instead of Fighting SEC,…

Why Did Ripple Consider Closing the Company?

Ripple came close to shutting down rather than fighting the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission after the agency sued the company in 2020, Chief Executive Brad Garlinghouse said this week.

Speaking at the University of Kansas School of Business, Garlinghouse said he and co-founder Chris Larsen seriously considered winding Ripple down and distributing the company’s XRP holdings to shareholders. The option would have allowed Ripple to avoid a long legal fight against a federal agency he described as having “infinite power and resources.”

The idea was straightforward. Ripple held a large amount of XRP. Garlinghouse said the company could have transferred those tokens to shareholders on a pro rata basis and dissolved. That would have effectively ended the company and removed the operating entity at the center of the SEC’s case.

He described that route as the easier path at the time. But Ripple chose to keep operating because closing the company would have cost hundreds of jobs. “I’m glad in retrospect, but that was not obvious at the time,” Garlinghouse said.

What Was At Stake In The SEC Case?

The SEC sued Ripple in 2020, alleging that the company had sold XRP as an unregistered security. The agency also named Garlinghouse and Larsen personally, making the case more than a corporate enforcement action.

For Ripple, the lawsuit threatened its core business model, its executive leadership, and the legal status of XRP in U.S. markets. A finding that XRP sales violated securities law could have limited exchange access, weakened institutional use cases, and made it harder for the company to operate inside the U.S. financial system.

Garlinghouse said he had met SEC officials 4 times between 2017 and 2019 without a lawyer present and was never told that XRP might be treated as a security. That history shaped his view that Ripple had not been given clear regulatory guidance before the agency escalated to litigation.

The legal battle became one of the crypto industry’s most closely watched cases because it tested how securities law applied to token issuers, exchange trading, and secondary-market transactions. It also became a broader symbol of the industry’s argument that regulation was being shaped through enforcement rather than through clear rules.

Investor Takeaway

Ripple’s near-shutdown shows how enforcement risk can become an existential issue for crypto companies. Legal classification, not only market demand or technology adoption, can determine whether a token-linked business survives.

How Much Did The Fight Cost Ripple?

Garlinghouse put Ripple’s legal costs at $150 million over the 4-year fight. That figure highlights the scale of resources needed to challenge a major U.S. regulator, even for a well-capitalized crypto company.

The cost also explains why many smaller firms settle or exit the market instead of pursuing litigation. Fighting a federal agency can consume management time, legal budgets, investor attention, and business momentum. For a company exposed to token markets, the legal process can also affect liquidity, exchange listings, and customer confidence.

Ripple eventually won a key ruling when Judge Analisa Torres found that XRP in itself is not a security. That decision gave Ripple and the broader crypto market a significant legal reference point, even though the case did not remove all regulatory questions around token sales and institutional distribution.

The two sides settled in May last year after new SEC leadership under the Trump administration took a more accommodating approach to crypto. The settlement closed a case that had weighed on Ripple for years and helped shift the company from legal defense back toward business expansion.

What Does This Mean For Crypto Regulation?

Garlinghouse’s comments point to a central problem for digital asset companies operating in the U.S.: regulatory uncertainty can force strategic decisions that go far beyond compliance. A company may have to decide whether to fight, settle, leave the market, or shut down before a court clarifies the rules.

The Ripple case also shows how leadership changes at regulators can alter enforcement outcomes. The company fought the SEC under one policy environment and settled after a shift in leadership and approach. That creates a difficult planning environment for crypto firms, especially those building products that depend on token issuance, secondary-market trading, or institutional adoption.

For investors, the case remains a reminder that token value is tied not only to network use and market liquidity but also to legal durability. XRP’s status, Ripple’s survival, and the company’s ability to continue operating were all shaped by the outcome of one enforcement action.

Ripple’s decision to fight preserved the company, but Garlinghouse’s comments show how close the alternative came. In crypto markets, regulatory pressure can turn a legal dispute into a corporate survival decision.

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