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Ripple Secures Australian AFSL: Compliance Progress, Not a Market Turning Point
Ripple Gains Another Step in Global Compliance, but Market Doesn’t Buy It
Ripple announces it is acquiring BC Payments Australia to obtain an Australian Financial Services License (AFSL). The announcement is retweeted by over 15 major accounts, with 525,000 views, framing it as a bridge connecting traditional finance and digital assets, while claiming that APAC payment volume will double by 2025. However, secondary market response is tepid: from March 10 to 11, XRP only rose about 1.75%, with trading volume down 30%. This is not a breakthrough event but a normal progression of compliance.
Social Media Buzz and Price/Volume Decoupling
Market sentiment shifted quickly from “the tweet is big” to “what does this mean,” positioning XRP more as a compliant cross-border payment “pipeline” rather than a trading asset. DL News mentions Ripple plans to invest about $2.5 billion by 2025, with acquisition pace slowing in 2026; this AFSL seems more like “solidifying the position” rather than disruptive expansion. From March 2 to 11, the correlation between price and volume is -0.31, indicating a clear decoupling between social media hype and trading activity—excitement does not equal buying.
In terms of causality, the real variable is not social media engagement but whether post-acquisition, verifiable trading volume actually increases. Without incremental operational flow, price and volume will struggle to generate positive feedback.
Conclusion:
Bottom line: This AFSL move appears more as a way to “pave the way” for enterprise payments in APAC. Short-term upside is likely limited; prioritize dips for positioning and wait for fundamentals driven by enterprise adoption to materialize.
Verdict: For this narrative, traders are already late; beneficiaries are builders targeting enterprise adoption, patient holders, and institutional funds. Short-term traders have little relevance.