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Ripple CEO says SEC suit nearly pushed company to shut down

Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse said he and co-founder Chris Larsen seriously considered shutting the company down after the SEC sued in 2020 and distributing Ripple's XRP holdings to shareholders. In a KU Hustle interview,...

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Ripple CEO says SEC suit nearly pushed company to shut down

Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse said he and co-founder Chris Larsen seriously considered shutting the company down after the SEC sued in 2020 and distributing Ripple's XRP holdings to shareholders.

In a KU Hustle interview, Garlinghouse said they chose to fight instead because closing Ripple would have cost hundreds of jobs. He estimated the four-year legal battle cost the company about $150 million. The scenario concerned Ripple as a company, rather than a shutdown of the XRP Ledger or a loss of XRP held by the public.

We almost decided to shut down the company when the SEC sued us. We we were like uh you know like the government has infinite power and resources.

Brad Garlinghouse CEO • Ripple View Profile

The SEC's August 2025 litigation release dismissed their respective appeals, resolving the enforcement action. However, the district court's final judgment remained in effect, including a $125.04 million civil penalty and an injunction against Ripple.

Related Reading SEC files to settle lawsuit with Ripple, execs over civil penalty dispute The SEC filing virtually concludes the long-standing legal battle with Ripple, although additional steps are required to ultimately extinguish the lawsuit. May 8, 2025 · Gino Matos

Garlinghouse said Ripple and Larsen had considered winding down the company and distributing its XRP holdings to shareholders on a pro rata basis. They chose to continue operating and fight the case, a decision Garlinghouse said preserved hundreds of jobs but ultimately cost about $150 million in legal fees.

Related Reading Ripple CEO calls SEC's appeal ‘insanity' as legal fight intensifies Ripple remains resolute as it dismisses SEC's latest appeal as groundless repetition of old arguments. Jan 16, 2025 · Oluwapelumi Adejumo A corporate decision with XRP at the center Conceptual diagram separating the crypto company, its token reserve, a decentralized ledger network and public token holders.

Ripple equity, XRP held by Ripple, the XRP Ledger, and XRP held by the public are different things. The plan Garlinghouse described concerned dissolving Ripple and distributing the company's XRP holdings to its shareholders. It did not imply that the ledger would shut down or that XRP held by the public would be transferred or lost.

Ripple could have shut down and the XRP Ledger still would have kept running. Garlinghouse wasn't making a call on XRP's price or suggesting the network or existing holders would be affected by the company's fate.

Related Reading Ripple agrees to pay $50M fine and drop cross-appeal to settle SEC lawsuit The settlement is now pending the SEC's vote, and will end the XRP lawsuit if approved. Mar 25, 2025 · Gino Matos

Ripple's XRP reserve gave the company a way out if it chose to shut down. Instead, leadership stayed the course, accepting years of litigation and mounting legal bills in exchange for keeping the business alive.

The interview stops short of saying Ripple’s XRP reserve paid for its defense. What it reveals is the leverage that reserve gave its leaders when the choice narrowed to fighting on or shutting down.

The post Ripple CEO says SEC suit nearly pushed company to shut down appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Why this matters

XRP is showing up inside the Regulation theme, so this story is worth tracking for follow-through rather than treating it as a one-off headline.

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