The Clarity Act's grandfather clause would have granted XRP automatic digital commodity status, but Senator Elizabeth Warren's Amendment 77 could require XRP to pass a decentralization test, potentially forcing Ripple to reduce its 18-20 billion XRP holdings above the 20% threshold. Simultaneously, Ripple is executing a strategic enterprise adoption plan through Ripple Treasury, which integrates XRP and RLUSD directly into corporate treasury management systems, with projections of $4 trillion in payment volume flowing through XRP within five years.
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XRP NEWS TODAY 🚨 Is Elizabeth Warren Trying To Stop XRP?!追加:
Welcome back to Crypto with Natalyia, where we break down what's really happening in crypto before the headlines catch up. If you want the signals, not the noise, you're in the right place.
Here is something most XRP holders haven't fully processed yet.
While everyone was celebrating the Clarity Act and what it meant for XRP's legal status, a single amendment filed quietly buried in a stack of 40 has the potential to reset the clock entirely.
And at the same time, Ripple is executing a strategy so quietly aggressive that Brad Garlinghouse is describing it as the entry point into a $120 trillion market. Both of these stories are happening right now simultaneously and they pull in completely opposite directions. So here is what we are going to do today. We are going to establish exactly where XRP stood before this amendment dropped because context is everything. Then we are going to look at what amendment 77 actually does and why it matters more than most people realize. Then we will talk numbers, the 18 to 20 billion XRP problem that nobody wants to say out loud. And we will close on the Ripple Treasury story, which is genuinely one of the most structurally important developments for real world XRP utility in years.
Let's start with what the Clarity Act originally offered XRP because this is the foundation. Everything else rests on the bill. All 309 pages of it contained a provision on page 111 that would have been a landmark moment. Any digital asset that served as the underlying asset of a US-listed spot ETF or ETP as of January 1st, 2026 would be conclusively classified as a digital commodity, not a security. Full stop.
For XRP, that meant the years of legal battle, the SEC lawsuit, the questions about centralization. None of that would need to be relitigated under a formal decentralization test. XRP would simply cross the line the moment the bill was signed into law. The other assets that fell under this clause were Salana, Litecoin, HAR, and Dogecoin. Five assets. That's it.
And that specificity matters because when you understand how targeted the clause was, you start to understand why what came next feels so deliberately targeted in response. Now, a common belief in the XRP community right now is that this is basically a done deal. That the Clarity Act is moving forward, XRP is covered, and the legal question is as good as resolved. That belief is understandable, but it is not complete because Senator Elizabeth Warren filed 40 amendments to the Clarity Act and amendment 77 would strike the grandfather clause entirely. Here is what that means in plain terms. If Warren's amendment is added to the bill, the fact that an XRP spot ETP was live before January 1st, 2026 becomes legally irrelevant. XRP does not get the fast lane treatment. Instead, it goes into the general classification framework, the same decentralization test that every other token would have to pass.
And this is where the conversation gets complicated in ways that are worth sitting with. The decentralization framework built into the Clarity Act requires a network to demonstrate that it is genuinely decentralized, that the value of the asset comes from the network itself, not from the managerial efforts of a central issuer. Think of it like this. The bill essentially asks whether a project has graduated from a companyrun experiment into a self-sustaining ecosystem.
There is a certification process, a set of standards, and a presumption of digital commodity status. If those standards are met, the specific threshold that makes this uncomfortable for Ripple is the ownership requirement.
Under the decentralization test, no single entity, including Ripple, can hold more than 20% of the total XRP supply. Right now, Ripple holds approximately 32 to 33 billion XRP in escrow. On top of that, there are roughly 5 billion XRP allocated for ondemand liquidity operations. And then you factor in the personal holdings of Chris Larson, Brad Garlinghouse, and other Ripple employees. Add it all together and you are looking at a figure that is roughly 18 to 20 billion XRP above that 20% threshold.
That is not a rounding error. That is a structural issue that would require Ripple to offload more than half of its escrow holdings just to qualify. Now, some people hear that and say, "Isn't that actually a good thing? Shouldn't Ripple hold less XRP?" It is a fair question, and there is a legitimate debate to have about whether a company controlling that much supply is healthy for the ecosystem long term.
But the mechanism matters just as much as the outcome. If Ripple is forced to liquidate 18 to 20 billion XRP on an accelerated timeline, the question is not whether it gets redistributed. It is who gets it, under what terms, and what they do with it. Next, institutions could absorb it. A sovereign fund could buy a block. A single actor with different incentives could accumulate a position that creates its own centralization problem.
or the process could introduce enough selling pressure to create a painful draw down right at the moment when XRP should be positioned for institutional adoption. None of those outcomes are guaranteed, but none of them are impossible either, and that uncertainty alone is worth taking seriously. Now, it is also worth being direct about the political dimension here. Senator Warren has been one of the most consistent critics of the crypto industry for years. She was closely aligned with the SEC under Gary Gensler, the same agency that spent 5 years in litigation against Ripple. Ripple was vocal in its opposition to that regulatory approach, including on Capitol Hill. So when Warren files 40 amendments and one of them happens to target the five assets that were about to cross the finish line, including XRP specifically, that context is not irrelevant. This does not mean her amendment will pass. Amendments get filed, debated, and rejected all the time. Senator Cynthia Lumis and others who have been strong advocates for the crypto industry are in a position to push back. But the amendment is real. It is on the table and it deserves to be treated seriously rather than dismissed.
The most important thing you can do right now if you hold XRP and you care about this outcome is contact your senator. Tell them you do not want Amendment 77 added to the Clarity Act.
Tell them that XRP and these other assets have already been through years of regulatory scrutiny. that they have earned their ETF listings through legitimate processes and that removing the grandfather clause does not protect investors. It just delays clarity and adds costs. That message delivered directly to elected officials is more effective than any social media post.
Now, let's shift gears completely because there is a second story running parallel to this one that is almost being drowned out by the noise around Warren's amendment.
And honestly, it might be the more important long-term development. Ripple has been building something that most people have not fully connected to XRP's utility story yet. It starts with an acquisition. Ripple purchased a platform called G Treasury in 2025, which has since been rebranded as Ripple Treasury.
G Treasury was already a fully operational treasury management system.
The kind of software that CFOs and finance teams at large enterprises use to manage cash, liquidity, and payment flows. These are not small companies experimenting with blockchain. These are institutions processing serious volumes of capital every single day. What Ripple has done is take that existing infrastructure and natively embed XRP and RLUSD, Ripple's dollar pegged stable coin directly into the account structure.
That means a CFO using Ripple Treasury can now view, hold, receive, and move XRP and RLUSD in the same dashboard where they manage traditional fiat. It is not a separate crypto module bolted on the side. It is integrated into the core system. That alone would be notable, but the strategy gets more precise from there. Ripple has launched what they are calling a tech credit program. The mechanics are straightforward, but the implications run deep. Any enterprise considering switching to Ripple Treasury from a competitor can receive a credit up to the value of their current annual software spend issued in XRP or RLUSD.
Effectively, Ripple is saying, "The cost of switching is zero. We will fund your trial in our own digital assets. Think about what that does at the organizational level. A treasury team that previously had no reason to touch XRP suddenly has a balance of it sitting inside the same system they used to run daily operations. They are not speculating. They are not making a bet on price. They are using it as a functional asset within a workflow they were already going to use. And once XRP is embedded in real reporting, real audit trails and real transaction logs, the friction to expand that usage into intercomp transfers, vendor payments, crossber FX flows drops dramatically.
This is what enterprise adoption actually looks like when it happens.
It is not a press release. It is not a partnership announcement with no follow-through. It is removing the budget objection, getting teams onboarded and then expanding from the inside. The scale of the market Ripple is targeting here is worth stating clearly.
The platform that became Ripple Treasury already processed approximately 13 trillion dollars in payment volume in 2025. To put that in perspective, none of that volume ran through crypto or stable coins. It was all traditional fiat infrastructure. Brad Garlinghouse in a recent interview said he believes that within 5 years 30% of that value, roughly $4 trillion, could be flowing through XRP and RLUSD. That is a measured projection, not a hype number.
30% over five years from a baseline of zero is a significant but achievable target if the infrastructure is already in place and the incentive structure draws enterprises in. And Ripple is not waiting for the market to come to them.
They are wiring XRP into the tools CFOs already live inside every day. The strategic logic here is worth spelling out. No other treasury management system on the market today offers native digital asset accounts where XRP and a Ripple issued stable coin sit in the same account and reporting layer as cash.
That is a structural moat and it positions XRP not as a speculative asset that treasury teams might consider someday but as a first class balance type inside enterprise financial infrastructure right now. This connects directly to something Brad Garlinghouse said in a recent interview on Binance Square, which is worth paying attention to. He made the point that the crypto industry has spent years doing the hard work, navigating regulatory uncertainty, proving out market demand, surviving reputational damage from events like Terra Luna and FTX.
And now, as regulatory clarity begins to emerge through acts like the Genius Act and the Clarity Act, traditional finance is moving faster than ever to acquire infrastructure, partner with established players, and position themselves before the window closes. His point was that there is a finite amount of blockchain infrastructure and the race to own it, build it, or partner with whoever has it is accelerating.
You are seeing it with Morgan Stanley entering crypto trading and undercutting competitors on fees. You are seeing it with Visa, Mastercard, and major banks moving to acquire stable coin infrastructure. The institutions that wait are going to find themselves paying a premium to access what the early movers built. Ripple's position in that landscape as a company with a regulated stable coin, a live payment network, and now a treasury management system with native digital asset integration is about as strong as it has ever been.
Which is exactly why the timing of Warren's amendment is so frustrating to watch. Here is how these two stories connect. The Clarity Acts grandfather clause was going to be the legal confirmation that XRP belongs in institutional portfolios on corporate balance sheets and inside enterprise infrastructure without qualification.
Ripple Treasury is the operational vehicle for exactly that adoption. One provides the legal clarity, the other provides the plumbing. Together they create a path to the kind of real world utility that turns XRP from a speculative asset into a functional one.
If amendment 77 passes and XRP has to go through the decentralization test, that path does not disappear, but it gets longer.
It could take over a year. It introduces uncertainty. It forces Ripple to address the supply threshold in ways that could be disruptive. And it delays the moment when US financial institutions can say with full confidence, XRP is a digital commodity and we can use it today. That delay has a cost, not just in price, but in momentum. In the enterprise world, procurement cycles, compliance reviews, and infrastructure decisions move slowly.
Every month of regulatory ambiguity is a month where a CFO's legal team says not yet. And in a market where the window for first mover advantage is narrowing, not yet is expensive. So, where does that leave us?
Warren's amendment is a real threat, but it is not a certainty. The Clarity Act still moves forward. The XRP ETF is live. Ripple's operational infrastructure is stronger than it has ever been, and the strategy to embed XRP into corporate Treasury workflows is already underway, regardless of how this legislative fight resolves. What the outcome of amendment 77 determines is not whether XRP becomes a legitimate financial asset.
It determines how quickly that legitimacy is formalized and how smooth the road to institutional adoption actually is. The destination is not in question. The route is. Stay informed, stay engaged, and if you have a senator, reach out. This is exactly the kind of moment where individual voices in aggregate actually move the needle.
The infrastructure is being built, the institutions are paying attention, and the legal framework is closer than it has ever been. Do not let one amendment written in frustration become the reason this gets delayed another year. That is the full picture. The threat, the opportunity, and the strategy running underneath all of it. Now you have the signals, not just the headlines.
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