XRP dropped following a lawsuit by The U.S. Securities Exchange Commission on both the founder and current Ripple CEO for raising more than $1.3 billion through an “unregistered securities offering” after selling the ‘ XRP’ token. Since the news about the lawsuit went public on December 22nd, the market capitalization has dropped by about 64% from $23 billion.   Before the lawsuit announcement, XRP, like other digital currencies, has spiked in value this year as major investors and companies have continued to adopt cryptocurrencies led by Bitcoin. Before Ripple’s legal woes, XRP’s price had surged by around 140% year-to-date.  The asset is currently trading at $0.17. The lawsuit notes that XRP is a security and not currency and claims that Ripple’s founder Christian Larsen and current CEO Brad Garlinghouse violated securities laws by selling XRP over a seven-year period. Ripple executives have since hit out at SEC over the lawsuit.

Bitstamp to delist XRP

Following the lawsuit, some exchanges have announced the delisting of XRP. For example, cryptocurrency exchange Bitstamp will halt XRP trading and deposits for all U.S. customers on Jan. 8, 2021.  With the security label, XRP will be subject to strict new SEC regulations that can heavily impact Ripple. Ripple owns about 55 billion of the total 100 billion XRP tokens in existence.