Cryptocurrency company Ripple has announced a new roadmap for digital asset trading for banks and institutional investors.
The white paper, titled “Planning for Corporate Digital Asset Trading,” presents a comprehensive framework aimed at enabling banks, hedge funds, and large financial institutions to access crypto markets in a safer, more efficient, and scalable manner.
Ripple’s report states that the current market structure poses significant operational burden and counterparty risk to institutional investors. Currently, large financial institutions are forced to open separate accounts on different exchanges, transfer funds between platforms, manage different credit limits, and take separate counterparty risks for each trade. It points out that problems with a single platform or bankruptcies (such as large-scale currency collapses in the past) could lead to funds being frozen.
The solution proposed by Ripple is a new model called “Digital Prime Broker” (DPB). In this structure, a single major prime broker consolidates liquidity, acts as a credit intermediary, and closes positions at the end of the day. The goal is to reduce capital requirements, reduce counterparty risk, and increase operational efficiency.
Ripple also $XRP Ledger (XRPL) is integrated into the infrastructure of the proposed DPB model. Through on-chain credit limits and faster settlement mechanisms, the goal is early netting, increased transparency, and reduced systemic risk. It is argued that this approach has the potential to create a structure similar to the mature prime brokerage structure found in traditional foreign exchange (FX) markets.
*This is not investment advice.

