Lord Belgrave@LordBelgrave
Nobody is supposed to know this. But as promised, I am sharing this with you.
And I need to be precise in how I say it.
From what I witnessed over the years, Ripple’s escrow was never intended to represent loose corporate ownership waiting to be sold into the market.
It was engineered with intent. Locked supply. Deterministic release schedules. Multi year horizons aligned to institutional readiness rather than speculation.
In the rooms I sat in, escrow was spoken about as effectively pre allocated liquidity. Not publicly assigned, not disclosed, but conceptually reserved. The assumption in those discussions was that a significant portion of escrowed XRP was already accounted for in future system deployments.
Those conversations were governed by extremely tight NDAs and they extended far beyond the United States. They included institutions across Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. Central banks. Systemically important financial institutions. Multilateral bodies. The IMF and BIS were referenced in the context of global settlement architecture, not marketing partnerships.
I want to be clear. I am explaining the framing that was presented internally. The escrow was treated as committed future liquidity, not optional inventory.
Now look at what has changed.
The shift in tone from these institutions particularly since Ripple secured OCC bank charter approval and the sudden use of language historically specific to Ripple’s framework suggest that long-standing NDAs may be approaching expiration.
When a system moves from preparation to deployment, ambiguity disappears. NDAs begin to expire. What was quietly reserved becomes operational.