A figure known in XRP circles as Lord Belgrave, who claims to be a City of London banker with direct ties to Ripple and the XRP ecosystem over the past decade, had previously posted a stateme
A figure known in XRP circles as Lord Belgrave, who claims to be a City of London banker with direct ties to Ripple and the XRP ecosystem over the past decade, had previously posted a statement that is circulating again. It is raising an uncomfortable question: could Ripple face another round of regulatory assault?
What He Claims to Have Witnessed
Lord Belgrave says he attended a strategy meeting in 2018 involving representatives from several large American banking institutions where Ripple and the XRP Ledger were explicitly discussed. According to his account, the banks understood the technology’s potential to compress settlement times and reduce the need for pre-funded liquidity well before the public conversation had even begun.
The concern inside that meeting, he claims, was not the technology itself but the speed at which an external infrastructure provider could begin influencing core payment rails that incumbent institutions depend on.
The most striking part of his account concerns what was allegedly discussed as a response strategy. “One section discussed regulatory pressure and market narrative as tools that could be used if and when Ripple’s influence reached a certain threshold,” he wrote. “The view was that if the technology became too disruptive too quickly, institutions would lean on regulatory channels to slow it down.”
He was careful to note this is not unusual in banking. Incumbent systems defend themselves. It is, he said, simply how large financial networks evolve.
The Timing Question
What makes the post significant beyond the historical claim is the forward-looking warning it carries. Lord Belgrave argued that the conditions he observed being discussed in 2018 appear to be aligning again today. Ripple’s institutional adoption is accelerating. Its visibility is at an all-time high. Its infrastructure is being integrated into mainstream financial systems.
“It would not surprise me if Ripple faces another wave of regulatory and institutional assault,” he wrote. “When a technology begins to challenge entrenched financial infrastructure, resistance is not the exception. It is the rule.”
What It Means for XRP Holders
Lord Belgrave’s claims are unverified and his identity has not been independently confirmed. The post does not constitute evidence of any specific plan or action against Ripple. However, the pattern he describes, of institutional incumbents using regulatory channels to slow disruptive technology once it reaches a critical threshold of adoption and visibility, is a dynamic that has precedent in financial history and is not inherently implausible.
Ripple spent four years and $150 million fighting the SEC’s last major regulatory challenge and won. Whether that victory has made a second challenge more or less likely is a question the XRP community is now actively debating.