XRP News: Ripple Blurs Line Between Wall Street and DeFi With Hyperliquid

XRP News: Ripple Blurs Line Between Wall Street and DeFi With Hyperliquid

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Ripple’s $1.25 Billion Hidden Road Acquisition Rebrands as “Ripple Prime”

Ripple is taking another step into decentralized finance, backing onchain derivatives at a moment when institutional players are quietly reassessing how and where they trade.

The blockchain firm said its institutional brokerage arm, Ripple Prime, has begun supporting Hyperliquid, a fast-growing decentralized derivatives venue. The move allows Ripple Prime clients to access onchain derivatives liquidity while managing risk and collateral alongside traditional asset classes.

The development shows a shift under way in crypto markets: decentralized trading venues, once dominated by retail users, are increasingly being shaped to meet institutional demands.

Bringing DeFi Into the Prime Brokerage Model

Through the integration, institutional clients using Ripple Prime can trade on Hyperliquid while keeping exposures consolidated across a broader portfolio that includes digital assets, foreign exchange, fixed income, and derivatives.

Instead of managing separate accounts and collateral pools for decentralized platforms, clients can operate through a single prime brokerage relationship — a structure long familiar in traditional finance but still rare in DeFi.

Market participants say this kind of setup could lower one of the biggest barriers to institutional DeFi adoption: fragmented risk management.

Why Hyperliquid?

Hyperliquid has gained attention for its onchain derivatives infrastructure, which aims to offer high-speed execution without relying on centralized intermediaries. While decentralized derivatives have existed for years, liquidity and performance concerns have kept most large institutions on the sidelines.

By plugging Hyperliquid into a prime brokerage framework, Ripple is effectively testing whether decentralized markets can be accessed in ways that resemble conventional trading desks — without requiring firms to a

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