Key insights:
- Social media claims Ripple Prime joins DTCC tokenized securities working group starting July 2026 pilot program.
- XRP provides liquidity for institutional clearing, settlement, and tokenized asset transfers worldwide operations.
- No public DTCC or Ripple announcement currently confirms the reported pilot timeline or operational details.
- Claims about an SEC three-year no-action letter lack publicly identified supporting documents or reference numbers.
Ripple Prime is part of a DTCC tokenized securities working group and that a pilot would begin in July 2026. The project would reach full capacity by October 2026 and use XRP for liquidity. Neither DTCC nor Ripple had publicly confirmed those claims at the time of writing.
Claims Connect XRP to Institutional Settlement
Ripple Prime would connect tokenized assets with XRP Ledger liquidity and provide access to DTCC clearing infrastructure. CharuSan XRP described XRP as a bridge asset for moving tokenized securities between institutions.
The post stated that institutions would need instant liquidity for clearing and settlement. It argued that XRP could provide that liquidity across global markets. The claims remain unverified through public filings or announcements.
Ripple has previously promoted the XRP Ledger for payments, tokenization, and settlement use cases. Financial firms have also explored tokenized securities, tokenized deposits, and blockchain-based settlement networks in recent years.
SEC Reference Draws Attention
The post also referred to a three-year “No Action Letter” from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. It claimed the letter cleared the regulatory path for the system described in the post.
Public SEC no-action letters are usually published on the agency’s website. The post did not provide a link, reference number, or date for the alleged letter. No matching SEC document was identified from the information provided.
DTCC has publicly discussed work on digital assets and tokenized securities through industry initiatives and pilot programs. The specific relationship described in the social media post was not confirmed through public DTCC materials.
Because the claims have not been independently verified, they should be treated as statements made on social media rather than established facts. Investors often monitor official filings, company announcements, and regulatory records for confirmation.




