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XRP Zooms 10% as Garlinghouse Says SEC Is Dropping Case Against Ripple
Earlier reports said that the long-standing legal battle between Ripple and the agency is nearing its end.

What to know:
- XRP surged 10% as Ripple CEO announced the SEC is set to drop its appeal against Ripple.
- CEO Brad Garlinghouse hailed this as a 'resounding victory' for Ripple and crypto.
- The legal battle, ongoing since 2020, is reportedly nearing its end.
XRP jumped 10% on Wednesday during U.S. morning hours as Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse said the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is set to drop its appeal against Ripple, the company closely adjacent to XRP tokens
"This is it – the moment we’ve been waiting for. The SEC will drop its appeal," Garlinghouse posted on X. "A resounding victory for Ripple, for crypto, every way you look at it."
Reports last week claimed that the long-standing legal battle between Ripple and the agency was nearing its end. The SEC filed a lawsuit against Ripple in 2020 — during President Donald Trump's first term — alleging that the company raised $1.3 billion via unregistered securities sales of XRP tokens.
U.S. Judge Analisa Torres in 2023 ruled that while Ripple violated federal securities law with institutional sales, the programmatic sales of tokens to retail exchanges did not violate the laws, a ruling that many viewed as a partial victory for Ripple. The judge handed a $125 million fine against Ripple last August. The SEC filed a "notice of appeal" following the decision.
The SEC's lawsuit against the crypto company, which Garlinghouse described as the “first major shot fired in the war on crypto” had resulted in $15 billion in losses for holders of XRP. Previous cases by the SEC had ended quickly, making this lawsuit against Ripple a prominent action against the crypto industry.
After the departure of former SEC Chair Gary Gensler, the Commission has dropped several cases, including its investigation into Coinbase. While Trump has nominated Paul Atkins to serve as the next chair, the Senate has not yet scheduled a hearing for his confirmation.
Ripple and its executives donated heavily during the 2024 election, including over $70 million to the Congress-focused Fairshake super PAC and over $5 million to Trump's inaugural fund.
The end of this lawsuit also increases chances for an XRP exchange-traded fund (ETF) to be approved by the SEC. Several potential issuers, including Grayscale, Bitwise and Franklin Templeton, have filed for such a fund in previous months with ETF experts at Bloomberg previously placing odds for an approval at 65-75% for the end of this year. XRP was among the assets Trump said would be part of a strategic U.S. crypto reserve.
The SEC declined to comment on Garlinghouse's statement, though in other crypto cases, these matters were agreed to at a staff level before eventually being approved by a vote of the commission.
Jesse Hamilton contributed reporting.
UPDATE (March 19, 2025, 13:42 UTC): Adds background and details on the legal battle between SEC and Ripple.
UPDATE (March 19, 13:48 UTC): Adds details on a potential XRP ETF approval.
UPDATE (March 19, 14:20 UTC): Adds detail about past actions and SEC declining to comment.
Krisztian Sandor
Krisztian Sandor is a U.S. markets reporter focusing on stablecoins, tokenization, real-world assets. He graduated from New York University's business and economic reporting program before joining CoinDesk. He holds BTC, SOL and ETH.

Helene Braun
Helene is a New York-based markets reporter at CoinDesk, covering the latest news from Wall Street, the rise of the spot bitcoin exchange-traded funds and updates on crypto markets. She is a graduate of New York University's business and economic reporting program and has appeared on CBS News, YahooFinance and Nasdaq TradeTalks. She holds BTC and ETH.
