ADVERTISEMENT

Ripple’s XRP hits an all-time high, sending cofounder's wealth soaring

Chris Larsen, who cofounded the red-hot cryptocurrency, owns 17% of the entire circulation

  • The digital tokens have risen astronomically since last year, making its cofounder a multi-millionaire, provided he could sell his stake.
  • It's important to distinguish the value of XRP from the value of its controlling company, Ripple.
ADVERTISEMENT

XRP, the second-largest cryptocurrency by market cap, hit an all time high of $3.315 per unit just before 8 a.m. Eastern on Thursday.

The massive jump in value — up more than 1300% since December — has made multimillionaires out of the lucky few who own massive amounts of the cryptocurrency.

Chris Larsen, who cofounded Ripple Labs (now just known as Ripple) in 2012, owns 5.19 billion XRP, or 13% of the total XRP in circulation, the company told Business Insider on Tuesday. At Thursday’s exchange rate, that stake is worth $16 billion — provided he could find a way to sell any or all of his holdings.

ADVERTISEMENT

Some crypto fanatics on Twitter have said Larsen could be the richest man in the world, even ahead of Bill Gates. None of the calculations could be confirmed by Business Insider. Still, the tweets have gained traction with hundreds of retweets.

Larsen, who could not be reached for comment, also owns a 17% stake in Ripple, the company behind XRP, the company confirmed Tuesday. The company has raised $93.6 million in funding over nine rounds to date, according to CrunchBase.

"It would be helpful to think of Ripple as a corporation,” Ripple’s vice president of product, Asheesh Birla, told Business Insider on Wednesday. “We make software products and we sell them to banks, payment providers, like MoneyGram just as an example, and then corporates. XRP ledger is a standalone decentralized product, and the primary use-cases are around digital assets."

XRP currently has a market cap of $115.1 billion, making it the second-largest digital currency behind bitcoin. The decentralized ledger for XRP was created and is maintained by Ripple, which is also holding 54 billion of the currency in escrow to “provide predictability about XRP supply,” it said last month.

The digital currency took a hit later in the week, after Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse got into a very public spat with New York Times reporter Nathaniel Popper on Twitter. Popper said he was having issues verifying many of the cooperating banks which the company had touted, a claim Ripple categorically denies. XRP was down more than 17% as of Friday afternoon.

ADVERTISEMENT

FOLLOW BUSINESS INSIDER AFRICA

Unblock notifications in browser settings.
ADVERTISEMENT

Recommended articles

Offshore sportsbooks and best sports betting sites

Offshore sportsbooks and best sports betting sites

Top 5 African cities with the most unaffordable real estate in 2024

Top 5 African cities with the most unaffordable real estate in 2024

US says it is still engaged with West African juntas

US says it is still engaged with West African juntas

Opinion Piece: Accelerating sustainable development goals through better agricultural risk management

Opinion Piece: Accelerating sustainable development goals through better agricultural risk management

Zimbabwe is set to honor Russian victory with a monument

Zimbabwe is set to honor Russian victory with a monument

Top cross-border payment companies in Africa on recent global ranking

Top cross-border payment companies in Africa on recent global ranking

Studio Monkey in collaboration with Worldwide FM and Gilles Peterson launches initiative to support grassroot music communities

Studio Monkey in collaboration with Worldwide FM and Gilles Peterson launches initiative to support grassroot music communities

NexaScale marks one-year milestone with visionary initiatives empowering Africa's youth for the future of work

NexaScale marks one-year milestone with visionary initiatives empowering Africa's youth for the future of work

How Patrice Motsepe-backed GoSolr wants to solve South Africa's power crises

How Patrice Motsepe-backed GoSolr wants to solve South Africa's power crises

ADVERTISEMENT