Ripple and Fides are expanding global bank connectivity for treasury workflows and payment reporting. The move keeps Ripple focused on infrastructure for cross-border finance.
The announcement centers on multi-bank access for business customers worldwide. It also adds to Ripple’s broader push into treasury tools and institutional payment services.

Ripple said Fides will support wider multi-bank connectivity for customers across global markets. The firms linked that work to treasury operations and payment reporting needs.
Ripple said, “Ripple and Fides work together to extend multi-bank connectivity to customers around the globe.” The statement framed the partnership as an operations and reporting upgrade.
Fides is known for bank connectivity and payment process tools for corporates. That makes the partnership relevant for firms that manage many banking relationships.
The core use case is workflow efficiency. Treasury teams often need one system for payments, bank data, and reporting across regions.
The partnership points to Ripple’s enterprise strategy rather than retail trading activity. It places attention on tools that support business payments and back-office processes.
That angle matters because treasury teams need stable reporting lines and broad bank reach. Firms also need clean data flows between banks and internal systems.
Ripple has often presented XRP and the XRP Ledger as infrastructure for fast value transfer. In public remarks, its leadership has tied that message to institutional demand.
At Davos in January, Brad Garlinghouse described XRP as neutral financial infrastructure. He also pointed to rising stablecoin transaction volumes during the past two years.
Garlinghouse repeated that position in several public appearances this year. His comments focused on utility, regulation, and bank participation.
On Fox Business, he said he saw an “80 to 90%” chance that the CLARITY Act would pass by April. That timeline later shifted, based on his April remarks.
At the Semafor World Economy Summit on April 13, he moved the expected timeline to the end of May. He said broader crypto rules could help banks take part more fully.
He also said that outcome would be “far bigger than anything Ripple itself could do alone.” That comment kept the focus on the wider market, not only Ripple.
Some social media posts have linked Ripple to possible XRP testing by large global brands. Those claims appeared alongside broader bullish commentary around XRP.
However, the partnership news itself is about bank connectivity, treasury workflows, and payment reporting. It does not confirm operational XRP use by Coca-Cola or American Airlines.
XRP has traded below its January highs during a volatile period for crypto markets. Even so, Ripple’s public messaging has stayed centered on enterprise finance and compliance.
For now, the Fides partnership adds another piece to Ripple’s infrastructure plan. It shows continued work on global banking access for corporate treasury teams.
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