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You are here: Home / News / Ripple Tried to Buy Circle for $5 Billion: Here’s Why It Failed
Ripple

Ripple Tried to Buy Circle for $5 Billion: Here’s Why It Failed

May 2, 2025 by Mishal Ali

Key Takeaways

  • Ripple’s $5B bid to acquire Circle signals a strategic move to dominate stablecoin infrastructure.
  • Circle’s rejection reflects its confidence in its IPO path and USDC’s standalone global role.
  • This bid underscores the shift from competition to consolidation in the stablecoin sector.

Ripple’s attempted acquisition of Circle for a reported $4–5 billion isn’t just a corporate power move; it’s a signal that the stablecoin race has entered a new phase.

With Circle’s USDC commanding a $61.7 billion market cap and RLUSD still in its infancy at $316.9 million, the proposal highlights Ripple’s desire to leapfrog market hurdles and establish instant dominance.

The bid was rejected, according to Bloomberg, with Circle stating that it undervalued its vision and where it is headed.

🚨 Circle Rejected Ripple Takeover Bid of $4-5B https://t.co/6VPRVN5hZx pic.twitter.com/mP3Ff6EEKU

— matthew sigel, recovering CFA (@matthew_sigel) April 30, 2025

The move follows just a few months after Ripple bought prime brokerage firm Hidden Road for $1.25 billion, a move that brought Ripple closer to traditional finance. Circle is also looking to list publicly and has remained mum in an SEC-imposed quiet period.

Market analyst Adam Cochran put this offer into perspective recently, opining that Ripple was never about competing but rather about consolidation. With this purchase of Circle, Ripple would have absorbed a top-2 stablecoin, an ISO 20022 layer, and worldwide agreements with banking titans.

This would not only expedite RLUSD’s infrastructural aspirations but also make Ripple the go-to liquidity provider for stablecoins and CBDCs.

Why Circle Chose IPO Independence Over Ripple Merger

In response to the attractive offer, Circle’s rejection was not valuation-driven. Though $5 billion is substantial, it doesn’t account for all of USDC’s market reach, compliance stature, and underlying infrastructure.

(4/🧵) USDC currently leads in regulatory adoption:
•80% of U.S.-based crypto exchanges offer USDC pairs
•Integrated with Stripe, Robinhood, Visa
•Backed by fully reserved U.S. treasuries
•Deemed a “regulated stablecoin” in U.S. policy discussions

Buying Circle means… pic.twitter.com/oBkjCDlkAT

— Stellar Rippler🚀 (@StellarNews007) April 30, 2025

Regulators and institutions see Circle as a compliant stablecoin issuer backed by reserves, attributes that will serve it well in both conventional financial and crypto systems in the long term.

Its path to IPO and its burgeoning ecosystem, such as its integration with Stripe, Visa, and Robinhood, demonstrate a company looking to be independent.

Its integration into Ripple may have brought governance friction in addition to diluting its distinctive market strategy. Regulatory oversight of such a combination would also be severe, potentially hindering innovation when speed and trust are increasingly important.

Ripple Eyes Global Expansion Despite Setback

The rejection of the bid does not put a period to it; it merely ushers in a new page. The company’s RLUSD may be a humble upstart, but with global expansion and acquisitions in front of it, the company is setting in place a homogeneous financial framework.

Owning Circle would have brought a shortcut to it instantly, but the bigger vision is intact. The company is building not only a product but also a platform in which liquidity, compliance, and real-time cross-border payments meet.

Related Reading | HBAR price breakout? Hedera eyes $2 as real-world asset adoption accelerates

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Circle, Cryptocurrency, Ripple (XRP), Stablecoins

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