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Just noticed something interesting about the early Ripple insiders and their XRP wealth. The story of how much money these founders actually made is way more opaque than most people realize, and it's pretty wild when you start digging into the details.
So here's the thing: Ripple's earliest team members got absolutely massive XRP allocations back in 2012, but tracking their actual net worth is nearly impossible. The blockchain literally erased its own history. In December 2012, a server bug wiped out the first 32,569 ledgers, which means over six months of transaction data just vanished. That's a pretty convenient way to keep early sales hidden, whether intentional or not.
Let me break down what we actually know. Chris Larsen, who became CEO in 2012, received 9 billion XRP at genesis. Forbes estimates his net worth somewhere between $8-12 billion today, though analysts have tracked him moving hundreds of millions worth of XRP to exchanges just this year alone. In 2015-2020, he and his wife sold roughly $450 million worth according to SEC documents. But here's the kicker: even with all those sales plus donations, he apparently still holds over a billion XRP worth around $3.6 billion at current prices.
Then there's Jed McCaleb, the co-founder who actually left Ripple back in 2013 to start Stellar. McCaleb's Jed McCaleb net worth story is different because he actually liquidated everything. He systematically sold at least 5.7 billion XRP between 2014 and July 2022, pulling in roughly $3 billion in the process. That's a completely different approach compared to Larsen's holding strategy. McCaleb basically cashed out entirely while his co-founders mostly kept their stacks.
David Schwartz, the other co-creator, claims he never owned anywhere near the amounts the others did. He says his peak holdings were only 26 million XRP, which is way less than the 1 billion-plus that estimates suggested. Schwartz has been pretty quiet about his actual sales and current holdings.
Arthur Britto is even more secretive. As a co-creator, he likely received between 1-2 billion XRP based on various estimates, but because the early ledger data got deleted and he keeps his finances private, nobody really knows what he sold or still owns. The guy literally posted one emoji on X this year. That's it.
Brad Garlinghouse, who became CEO in 2017, sold at least $150 million worth of XRP between 2017-2019 according to SEC filings. More recently, there's speculation he dumped another $200 million this summer. His net worth supposedly hit $10 billion during the recent XRP rally in March 2025. Unlike the co-founders, Garlinghouse also holds Ripple equity, so his wealth isn't purely XRP-dependent.
The bigger picture here is that the deleted ledger data created this permanent information gap about early insider activity. You can track some movements into exchanges, but once those coins hit exchange wallets, it becomes impossible to tell if they were actually sold, held, or converted. It's one of those situations where the technical history of the blockchain itself obscures the financial history of its earliest participants.
With XRP currently trading around $1.43, some of these holdings are worth staggering amounts. The whole thing raises interesting questions about transparency in crypto projects and how much we actually know about who owns what in projects we think we understand pretty well.