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Ripple’s Global Co-Head of Policy on Four Best Practices for Digital Asset Custody

 Ripple’s Global Co-Head of Policy on Four Best Practices for Digital Asset Custody
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By Siamak Masnavi, AI Boost|Edited by Aoyon Ashraf

Updated Aug 19, 2025, 5:55 p.m. Published Aug 19, 2025, 5:41 p.m.

A bank vault is on display at Wintrust Bank, photographed during the Chicago Architecture Foundation's 'Open House Chicago 2024' in Chicago, Illinois on October 19, 2024.
  • Ripple and Blockchain Association Singapore recently co-hosted a workshop in Singapore on digital asset custody and stablecoins.
  • Ripple’s policy team pointed to compliance by design, tailored models, resilience and governance as best practices.
  • Ripple said custody will underpin scaling of stablecoins, tokenized finance and cross-border settlement.

Ripple executives used a policy-related blog post on Monday to argue that digital asset custody has become the foundation for institutional adoption of stablecoins, tokenized assets and cross-border settlement.

Rahul Advani, Ripple’s global co-head of policy, and Caren Tso, its Asia-Pacific policy manager, said in the post that custody is now a critical entry point for enterprises that want to scale digital finance. They pointed to a recent Ripple–Boston Consulting Group report projecting tokenized real-world assets could reach $18.9 trillion by 2033, and to Ripple’s own survey finding more than half of firms in Asia Pacific plan to adopt custody solutions in the next three years.

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The blog post was timed to a “Custody & Cybersecurity: Institutional Best Practices for Stablecoins and Beyond” workshop Ripple co-hosted with Blockchain Association Singapore (BAS) earlier this month. That event focused on institutional standards for stablecoin custody, culminating in the release of a “best practices” report by BAS subcommittees on stablecoins and cybersecurity.

The authors outlined four principles they said should guide custody design.

First, they called for a “compliance-by-design” approach, noting that regulators such as Singapore’s Monetary Authority (MAS) require strict asset segregation and recovery protocols.

Second, they stressed that institutions must choose custody models suited to their needs, whether third-party, hybrid, or self-custody, with growing demand for wallet types beyond the hot-versus-cold divide.

Third, the executives highlighted operational resilience. They said workflows must withstand disruption, meet recovery benchmarks set by regimes such as the EU’s Digital Operational Resilience Act, and incorporate strong monitoring and incident-response processes.

Fourth, they pointed to governance, citing segregation of duties, independent oversight, and audit trails as essential to maintaining trust.

A fifth theme of the workshop, according to Ripple, was the role of custody in enabling stablecoins to move into mainstream use cases such as trade finance, cross-border payments, and liquidity management. The authors argued that enterprise-grade custodians can support this shift by offering API integration, AML tools and programmable features, while also evolving to safeguard tokenized documents tied to global commerce.

The blog also promoted Ripple’s own products. The company highlighted its Ripple USD (RLUSD) stablecoin, which it said benefits from being issued under a New York Trust Company Charter, with requirements for segregated reserves, independent audits, and full dollar backing. Ripple added that its custody platform is designed to help institutions manage tokenized assets while meeting compliance and operational standards.

Advani and Tso concluded that as digital finance expands, custody infrastructure will need to integrate more deeply with smart contracts, tokenized documents, and automated compliance. “These capabilities,” they wrote, “will help lay the foundation for a digital financial system that is scalable, interoperable, and fit for the new era of finance.”

Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk’s full AI Policy.

Siamak Masnavi is a researcher focused on blockchain technology, cryptocurrency regulation and macroeconomic forces shaping digital assets — including interest rate policy, capital flows and adoption trends. He holds an MSc and PhD in computer science from the University of London and began his career in software development, with nearly four years in the banking sector in London and Zurich. Since April 2018, he has been writing about the crypto industry. His focus shifted primarily to research in November 2024, though he continues to contribute regularly to industry reporting.

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“AI Boost” indicates a generative text tool, typically an AI chatbot, contributed to the article. In each and every case, the article was edited, fact-checked and published by a human. Read more about CoinDesk’s AI Policy.

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