Ripple’s “payments coalition” plus a $50B valuation buyback: infrastructure meets capital strategy

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Ripple is playing two games at once, and both are starting to look very deliberate. On one side, it just joined Mastercard’s Crypto Partner Program, now 85+ firms strong.

On the other, it’s running a share buyback that values the company around $50 billion.

One is about building the actual pipes for payments, the other is about shaping the story around its own worth.

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Mastercard’s crypto coalition: legacy rails meet blockchain

Mastercard’s Crypto Partner Program now includes over 85 companies, from banks to fintechs to blockchain networks. Ripple’s inclusion means it’s officially part of the “legacy rails + crypto rails” convergence Mastercard is pushing.

For everyday users, this matters because it’s one more step toward making crypto payments feel normal.

When Mastercard brings in Ripple, it’s signaling to merchants, banks, and payment processors that Ripple’s tech (especially On-Demand Liquidity) can plug into existing systems. Cross-border transfers get faster and cheaper without forcing anyone to ditch their current setup.

The $50B buyback: why tender offer instead of IPO?

At the same time, Ripple is quietly running a share buyback program that pegs its valuation near $50 billion.

This is a tender offer, not an IPO, meaning the company is buying back shares from existing holders rather than issuing new ones to the public.

Why do this now?

It sends a clear message: Ripple believes it’s worth more than the market currently prices it at. By buying back shares, it reduces supply and boosts value for remaining holders (employees, early investors, etc.). It’s also a way to reward loyalty without diluting ownership through a public listing.

From the market’s viewpoint, this is interesting. A $50B valuation in a private tender offer suggests Ripple is confident enough to put its money where its mouth is, literally.

It’s not waiting for public markets to decide its worth. They’re shaping that narrative itself.

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What this means for you

These two moves aren’t unrelated. The Mastercard coalition builds real infrastructure, the “rails” Ripple has always talked about.

The buyback builds the capital story, the valuation narrative that attracts and retains talent, partners, and future investors.

Together they show a company that’s maturing: it’s plugging into the biggest payment network in the world, and actively managing its own worth in private markets.

This is a sign that Ripple is shifting from “crypto startup” to “payments infrastructure company with crypto at its core.”

That shift usually means more stability, more partnerships, and less wild speculation, but also less moonshot upside.

Ripple is doing what mature companies do: building the pipes (Mastercard coalition) while managing the story (buyback). The next chapter will be about execution and valuation.

Miklos Pasztor
Author: Miklos Pasztor
Crypto market researcher and external contributor at Kriptoworld

Wheel. Steam engine. Bitcoin.

📅 Published: March 13, 2026 • 🕓 Last updated: March 13, 2026
✉️ Contact: [email protected]


Disclosure:This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Kriptoworld.com accepts no liability for any errors in the articles or for any financial loss resulting from incorrect information.

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