Ripple chief executive officer Brad Garlinghouse said Friday that the companyβs business in the Asia-Pacific region has not suffered from the ongoing regulatory issues in the U.S.
Ripple's Asia Pacific Business Flourishing Despite SEC Lawsuit, Says CEO
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Rippleβs Business in Asia and Japan Sees Growth
Ripple is facing a $1.3 billion lawsuit from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). In December, the SEC charged Ripple, creators of the eponymous XRP cryptocurrency, and its top executives with selling unregistered securities since 2013.
The blockchain payments firm denies the charges, but that has not stopped a number of U.S. crypto exchanges, including Coinbase, from delisting XRP, the worldβs seventh most valuable digital asset by market capitalization.
Garlinghouse, who is accused of personally gaining up to $600 million from the unregistered sale of XRP in an ICO offering, told Reuters in a Mar. 5 interview that business in areas like Japan was flourishing.
It (the lawsuit) has hindered activity in the United States, but it has not really impacted whatβs going on for us in Asia Pacific. We have been able to continue to grow the business in Asia and Japan because weβve had regulatory clarity in those markets.
CEO Claims the Token βStill Traded on Over 200 Exchanges Around the Worldβ
The Asia Pacific region is a major remittance corridor for Ripple and the firm has achieved remarkable results as a remittance solution provider in the region. In Japan, Ripple concluded a joint venture deal with Japanese conglomerate SBI Holdings to create SBI Ripple β a company that aims to facilitate payments underpinned by Rippleβs technology.
Garlinghouse revealed that his company has signed more than 15 new contracts with banks worldwide since the SEC brought its lawsuit, according to the Reuters report. He added that the lack of regulatory clarity in the U.S. is hindering innovation.
βWeβre seeing the activity of XRP liquidity has grown outside the United States and continue to grow in Asia, certainly in Japan,β he said. On XRP delistings, the Ripple CEO stated that he was not aware of any exchange outside the U.S. that had stopped trading of the token.
β XRP is traded on over 200 exchanges around the world. Itβs really only three or four exchanges in the United States that have halted trading,β said Garlinghouse, who has previously spoken about relocating Rippleβs headquarters from the U.S. due to unfavorable regulation.
What do you think about Rippleβs overseas operations as revealed by the CEO? Let us know in the comments section below.














