MAS has expanded Ripple’s MPI license, allowing the company to offer a much wider range of regulated payment services and marking a notable regulatory milestone for the company’s operations in Singapore.
Ripple first secured a full MPI license in 2023, enabling digital payment token services but limiting comprehensive end-to-end payment capabilities until the restrictions were removed in the 2025 expansion.
The upgraded license now permits full cross-border payment processing, regulated XRP and RLUSD services, liquidity solutions, on/off-ramps and enterprise-grade settlement tools under Singapore’s strict oversight.
The expanded license positions Ripple to meet rising institutional demand across Asia-Pacific, compete in major remittance corridors, offer XRP- and RLUSD-based services and strengthen relationships with regional regulators.
Ripple took a big step ahead in Singapore when the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) extended the scope of Ripple’s Major Payment Institution (MPI) license. This permitted the company to offer a significantly broader range of regulated payment services.
For Ripple, which regards Singapore as its main center of operations in the Asia-Pacific region, this decision marks the start of a new stage of international growth.
This article discusses how Ripple set its foot in Singapore, what the extended MPI license allows and the prevailing challenges for Ripple in the country.
How Ripple built its Singapore base
In 2023, Ripple’s subsidiary Ripple Markets APAC obtained a full MPI license under Singapore’s Payment Services Act (PSA). This allowed the company to provide digital payment token services in compliance with strict rules on Anti-Money Laundering (AML), consumer protection, transaction monitoring and operational resilience.
However, the license restricted Ripple to certain digital token-related activities. It did not permit the comprehensive end-to-end payment solutions that banks, fintech companies and large corporations increasingly require. The 2025 expansion of the license removes those limitations.
Did you know? Singapore was one of the first countries to regulate crypto through the PSA 2019, a dedicated framework. The country created clear rules for digital payment tokens at a time when most nations were still debating basic definitions.
Details of the expanded MPI license for Ripple in Singapore
The MAS has authorized Ripple to provide a wider set of regulated payment services, including:
Full end-to-end cross-border payment processing, covering the entire transaction flow rather than only token-related elements
Regulated services involving digital payment tokens, such as XRP (XRP) and Ripple’s stablecoin Ripple USD (RLUSD), including settlement, liquidity provision and integration into institutional payment systems
Scalable payment solutions for banks, fintech firms and cryptocurrency companies
Fiat-to-crypto on-ramps and off-ramps, cross-border remittances and enterprise-grade settlement tools, all under MAS oversight.
Ripple is now permitted to offer a broader range of regulated services to a larger group of clients in one of the world’s most rigorously supervised financial markets.
Ripple president Monica Long described the approval as a major advance that will help the company expand its licensed services in Singapore for a growing customer base of banks and fintech firms. She highlighted Singapore’s clear and innovation-friendly regulatory environment, which stands out compared to the legal uncertainty Ripple faced in other jurisdictions.
Did you know? The MAS openly warns retail investors about crypto risks, yet simultaneously supports institutional-grade infrastructure. This blend of pro-innovation policy and cautious consumer guidance has helped Singapore maintain financial stability while remaining a global blockchain hub.
Why Ripple’s extended MCI license matters in Asia-Pacific
The Asia-Pacific region is the fastest-growing market for digital assets worldwide, and Singapore is a leading center for financial innovation. The expanded license strengthens Ripple’s position by enabling it to:
Meet rising institutional demand for regulated blockchain-based payment and liquidity solutions
Compete effectively in high-volume cross-border remittance corridors
Offer regulated services involving XRP and RLUSD at scale
Enhance its reputation with regulators in neighboring countries, supporting further regional expansion.
Did you know? Singapore was one of the earliest major economies to embrace stablecoin regulation, releasing formal guidelines on reserve backing, redemption rights and operational safeguards.
What challenges remain for Ripple in Singapore
Despite this progress, certain obstacles remain:
Some permitted activities have not been publicly detailed, requiring further compliance work.
Banks and large institutions often need time to evaluate and integrate new payment systems.
Regulatory differences across countries mean Ripple must obtain comparable approvals elsewhere for seamless global services.
Market volatility can affect the pace of institutional adoption of XRP-based solutions.
Nevertheless, Singapore now provides Ripple with one of its strongest regulatory foundations worldwide.
Did you know? Companies offering digital payment token services in Singapore must comply with rigorous AML and counter-terrorism financing standards, including full transaction monitoring, risk scoring and independent audits.
Strategic greenlight for digital global payments
For Ripple, the expansion of its MPI license is a strategic enabler rather than just a procedural change. It effectively grants the company approval to vastly expand its operations, permitting it to offer complete cross-border payment solutions and to seamlessly integrate both XRP and the RLUSD stablecoin within regulated financial services. This authorization allows Ripple to serve a more extensive and diverse clientele, encompassing banks, financial technology firms and other crypto-focused enterprises.
By solidifying its operational base in Singapore, Ripple is helping Singapore position itself as a central hub for its activities across the Asia-Pacific region and the global market. For a firm striving to become a leader in the future of digital payments, this type of regulatory endorsement is essential, transforming corporate goals into tangible operations.
The true scale of this achievement will be determined by Ripple’s subsequent actions. These include the establishment of new partnerships, the activation of payment corridors and the expansion of tokenized payment applications. The expansion of the license is likely to reshape the digital payment ecosystem throughout Asia-Pacific and the wider international financial landscape.
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Crypto companies seeking a US federal bank charter should be treated no differently than other financial institutions, says Jonathan Gould, the head of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC).
Gould told a blockchain conference on Monday that some new charter applicants in the digital or fintech spaces could be seen as offering novel activities for a national trust bank, but noted “custody and safekeeping services have been happening electronically for decades.”
“There is simply no justification for considering digital assets differently,” he added. “Additionally, it is important that we do not confine banks, including current national trust banks, to the technologies or businesses of the past.”
The OCC regulates national banks and has previously seen crypto companies as a risk to the banking system. Only two crypto banks are OCC-licensed: Anchorage Digital, which has held a charter since 2021, and Erebor, which got a preliminary banking charter in October.
Crypto “should have” a way to supervision
Gould said that the banking system has the “capacity to evolve from the telegraph to the blockchain.”
He added that the OCC had received 14 applications to start a new bank so far this year, “including some from entities engaged in novel or digital asset activities,” which was nearly equal to the number of similar applications that the OCC received over the last four years.
Comptroller of the Currency Jonathan Gould giving remarks at the 2025 Blockchain Association Policy Summit. Source: YouTube
“Chartering helps ensure that the banking system continues to keep pace with the evolution of finance and supports our modern economy,” he added. “That is why entities that engage in activities involving digital assets and other novel technologies should have a pathway to become federally supervised banks.”
Gould brushes off banks’ concerns
Gould noted that banks and financial trade groups had raised concerns about crypto companies getting banking charters and the OCC’s ability to oversee them.
“Such concerns risk reversing innovations that would better serve bank customers and support local economies,” he said. “The OCC has also had years of experience supervising a crypto-native national trust bank.”
Gould said the regulator was “hearing from existing national banks, on a near daily basis, about their own initiatives for exciting and innovative products and services.”
“All of this reinforces my confidence in the OCC’s ability to effectively supervise new entrants as well as new activities of existing banks in a fair and even-handed manner,” he added.
The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission has issued updated guidance for tokenized collateral in derivatives markets, paving the way for a pilot program to test how cryptocurrencies can be used as collateral in derivatives markets.
Collateral in derivatives markets serves as a security deposit, acting as a guarantee to ensure that a trader can cover any potential losses.
The digital asset pilot, announced by CFTC acting chairman Caroline Pham on Monday, will allow futures commission merchants (FCM) — a company that facilitates futures trades for clients — to accept Bitcoin (BTC), Ether (ETH) and Circle’s stablecoin USDC (USDC) for margin collateral.
Pham said in a statement that the pilot program also “establishes clear guardrails to protect customer assets and provides enhanced CFTC monitoring and reporting.”
As part of the pilot, participating FCMs will be subject to strict reporting criteria, which require weekly reports on total customer holdings and any significant issues that may affect the use of crypto as collateral.
The CFTC’s Market Participants Division, Division of Market Oversight, and Division of Clearing and Risk also issued updated guidance on the use of tokenized assets as collateral in the trading of futures and swaps.
The guidance covers tokenized real-world assets, including US Treasury’s money market funds, and topics such as eligible tokenized assets, legal enforceability, segregation and control arrangements.
Pham said in an X post on Monday that the “guidance provides regulatory clarity and opens the door for more digital assets to be added as collateral by exchanges and brokers, in addition to US Treasurys and money market funds.”
The Market Participants Division also issued a “no-action position” on specific requirements regarding the use of payment stablecoins as customer margin collateral and the holding of certain proprietary payment stablecoins in segregated customer accounts.
A CFTC Staff Advisory that restricted FCMs’ ability to accept crypto as customer collateral, Staff Advisory 20-34, was also withdrawn because it is “outdated and no longer relevant,” in part due to the GENIUS Act.
Crypto execs back CFTC move
Several crypto executives applauded the move by the CFTC.
Katherine Kirkpatrick Bos, the general counsel at blockchain company StarkWare, said the use of “tokenized collateral in the derivatives markets is MASSIVE.”
“Atomic settlement, transparency, automation, capital efficiency, savings. Feels abrupt but who recalls the tokenization summit in 2/24, a glimmer of hope in the darkness,” she said.
Coinbase chief legal officer Paul Grewal also supported the action, calling Staff Advisory 20-34 a “concrete ceiling on innovation.”
“It relied on outdated info, went well beyond the bounds of regulation and frustrated the goals of the PWG.”
Salman Banaei, the general counsel at layer-1 blockchain the Plume Network, said it was a “major move” by the CFTC, and another push toward wider adoption.
“This is a step toward the use of onchain infra to automate settlement for the biggest asset class in the world: OTC derivatives, swaps,” he added.
The day after Sir Keir Starmer said he wanted Angela Rayner back in the cabinet, she showed Labour MPs what they’ve been missing.
The former deputy prime minister delighted Labour backbenchers with a powerful Commons speech defending her workers’ rights legislation on Monday evening.
With the House of Lords locked in a battle of parliamentary “ping pong” with MPs, she told ministers: “Now is not the time to blink or buckle.”
Her very public intervention came amid claims that her next move has the Labour Party on tenterhooks and that she’s the favourite to succeed Sir Keir if she wants the job.
And her speech, delivered from notes and clearly meticulously prepared, appeared to send a message to Labour MPs: I’m here to make a comeback.
The government’s flagship Employment Rights Bill was championed by Ms Rayner when she was deputy PM, in the face of bitter opposition from the Conservatives.
More on Angela Rayner
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In a bid to end the deadlock with the Lords, ministers have backed down on unfair dismissal protection from day one, proposing a compromise of six months.
Backing the compromise, brokered with the TUC, Ms Rayner said: “I know ministers had faced difficult decisions and difficult discussions with the employers and worker representatives.
“But I strongly believe that the work that has been done has been necessary, and we should be able to move forward now.”
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1:19
Could Rayner come back?
Attacking the upper chamber for delaying the legislation, she said: “There is now no more time to waste.
“Vested interests worked with the Tories and the Lib Dems and, cheered on by Reform and backed by the Greens, to resist the manifesto on which we were elected.
“And now there can be no excuses. We have a mandate for a new deal for working people, and we must, and we will deliver it.
And she concluded: “It has been a battle to pass this bill, but progress is always a struggle that we fought for. Its passage will be a historic achievement for this Labour government.
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Angela Rayner’s resignation speech
“It will benefit working people now and into the future. Now is not the time to blink or buckle. Let’s not waste a minute more. It’s time to deliver.”
It was the sort of fighting talk and defiance of the government’s opponents that will have cheered up Labour MPs and boosted her hopes of a comeback and even a leadership bid.
It came as speculation over Sir Keir’s future grows more frenzied by the day, with claims that even some of his own supporters have begun the hunt for his successor.
The thinktank that ran his leadership campaign in 2020, Labour Together, is reported to be canvassing party members on candidates to replace him.
Image: Wes Streeting and Angela Rayner.
There was even a claim last week that allies of Wes Streeting were sounding out Labour MPs about a pact with Ms Rayner and a joint ticket for the leadership.
The health secretary dismissed that claim as a “silly season story”, while a Rayner ally said: “There’s no vacancy and there’s no pact”. They added that she will not “be played like a pawn”.
Mr Streeting did, however, start speculation himself when he said in his Labour conference speech: “We want her back. We need her back.”
Fuelling more speculation, Sir Keir went further than he had previously on Sunday, when he was asked in an Observer interview if he missed her and replied; “Yes, of course I do. I was really sad that we lost her.”
And asked if she would return to the cabinet, the prime minister said: “Yes. She’s hugely talented.”
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0:42
‘Angela Rayner, this achievement is yours.’
Sir Keir also described Ms Rayner, who left school at 16 without any qualifications, as “the best social mobility story this country has ever seen”.
But a swift return to the cabinet would be hugely controversial, because the PM’s ethic adviser, Sir Laurie Magner, ruled that she breached the ministerial code by underpaying stamp duty when she bought a flat.
But she has been linked to speculation about possible efforts to remove Sir Keir if – as predicted – Labour performs badly in the Scottish, Welsh and local elections next May.
Her supporters also claim she will eventually be cleared by HMRC over her stamp duty breach, clearing the way for her to come back.
And her latest speech – combative, defiant and yet loyal – will have boosted her hopes, and reminded Labour MPs what they’ve missed since she quit in September.