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Webus Bets $300M on XRP to Fuel Payments

    Webus, a Chinese AI-driven mobility company, wants to make chauffeur payments
    frictionless with a $300M XRP reserve. Markets? Unimpressed — for now.

    Chinese AI-powered mobility giant Webus International Limited just
    lobbed a bold pitch into the crypto world: it’s aiming to
    raise up to $300 million to build a dedicated XRP reserve to support its
    expanding borderless payments ambitions. At the same time, the company is
    also renewing its partnership with Tongcheng Travel Holdings Ltd., a leading
    Chinese tourism firm.

    In a May 29 announcement,
    Webus revealed it will pursue a non-equity financing route to fund the war
    chest — think bank loans, shareholder guarantees, institutional credit lines,
    and some of its own reserves.

    CEO Nan Zheng said of the move, “These strategic developments have
    the potential to create a powerful synergy between our domestic and
    international operations,” said Nan Zheng, Chief Executive Officer of
    Webus. “Our partnership with Tongcheng strengthens our China network
    infrastructure, while the integration of an XRP blockchain integration has the
    potential to revolutionize how we handle cross-border payments for both
    partners and travelers worldwide.”

    In short: Webus wants XRP to be the grease in its global wheels —
    cutting out currency-conversion headaches and enabling instant chauffeur
    payments, refunds, and cross-border settlements for its AI-driven travel
    services.

    Why XRP? It’s About Speed, Costs — and Corporate Trendsetting

    So why XRP? It boils down to the low-fee settlement layer, rapid
    transaction times, and seamless integration with the Ledger — all key for
    powering international services without the typical FX friction.

    Zheng positioned it as a natural fit, “Internationally, our potential
    XRP implementation can eliminate traditional payment friction, allowing instant
    settlement with chauffeurs and service providers worldwide while providing
    immediate refunds when needed. Together, these initiatives can create a truly
    borderless travel experience for our customers.”

    The initiative is part of a wider three-pronged strategy:

    • Building the reserve
    • Developing proprietary blockchain infrastructure (wallets, Web3 loyalty
      tokens, on-chain booking records)
    • Accelerating global expansion of Webus’s mobility platform

    And while XRP-based treasuries remain rare (Bitcoin still dominates the corporate
    treasury scene), Webus’s move signals rising institutional curiosity. In fact, this announcement comes after VivoPower
    International revealed its own $121M treasury plans — a trend worth
    watching.

    Market Reaction: XRP Stays… Yawn… Flat

    Here’s the kicker: despite the headline-grabbing $300M bid, XRP’s price
    barely moved.

    The markets appeared less than thrilled (screenshot).

    Crypto markets didn’t exactly throw a ticker-tape
    parade for Webus. But that’s not entirely surprising: the plan
    remains non-binding and is contingent on due diligence and final documentation.
    Nothing has been purchased yet, and no timeline for closing the financing has
    been disclosed.

    Still, institutional interest is percolating. XRP has notched recent
    wins, including a CME futures listing, and the
    first ETF from Volatility Shares. Multiple spot ETF applications
    are also pending with the SEC.

    Translation: even if markets aren’t pumping on this news, institutional
    validation of XRP is creeping forward.

    Will Corporates Warm Up to XRP Treasuries?

    Corporate adoption of XRP as a treasury asset remains nascent — this is
    no MicroStrategy Bitcoin repeat (yet). But Webus’s move, combined with
    VivoPower’s, suggests that XRP’s utility-driven thesis (cheap cross-border
    payments) is resonating in certain verticals.

    And Webus isn’t exactly a crypto-native firm — this is an AI-powered
    mobility player looking to integrate blockchain to solve real-world payment
    problems across its chauffeur networks and Tongcheng partnership.

    If this bet pays off, expect more non-crypto firms to explore XRP or
    similar tokens for niche treasury and operational use cases.

    For now, XRP holders may have to settle for potential, not pumps. But
    in an increasingly multi-chain, multi-asset world, watching which corporates
    back which tokens could soon matter more than watching price charts alone.

    Webus, a Chinese AI-driven mobility company, wants to make chauffeur payments
    frictionless with a $300M XRP reserve. Markets? Unimpressed — for now.

    Chinese AI-powered mobility giant Webus International Limited just
    lobbed a bold pitch into the crypto world: it’s aiming to
    raise up to $300 million to build a dedicated XRP reserve to support its
    expanding borderless payments ambitions. At the same time, the company is
    also renewing its partnership with Tongcheng Travel Holdings Ltd., a leading
    Chinese tourism firm.

    In a May 29 announcement,
    Webus revealed it will pursue a non-equity financing route to fund the war
    chest — think bank loans, shareholder guarantees, institutional credit lines,
    and some of its own reserves.

    CEO Nan Zheng said of the move, “These strategic developments have
    the potential to create a powerful synergy between our domestic and
    international operations,” said Nan Zheng, Chief Executive Officer of
    Webus. “Our partnership with Tongcheng strengthens our China network
    infrastructure, while the integration of an XRP blockchain integration has the
    potential to revolutionize how we handle cross-border payments for both
    partners and travelers worldwide.”

    In short: Webus wants XRP to be the grease in its global wheels —
    cutting out currency-conversion headaches and enabling instant chauffeur
    payments, refunds, and cross-border settlements for its AI-driven travel
    services.

    Why XRP? It’s About Speed, Costs — and Corporate Trendsetting

    So why XRP? It boils down to the low-fee settlement layer, rapid
    transaction times, and seamless integration with the Ledger — all key for
    powering international services without the typical FX friction.

    Zheng positioned it as a natural fit, “Internationally, our potential
    XRP implementation can eliminate traditional payment friction, allowing instant
    settlement with chauffeurs and service providers worldwide while providing
    immediate refunds when needed. Together, these initiatives can create a truly
    borderless travel experience for our customers.”

    The initiative is part of a wider three-pronged strategy:

    • Building the reserve
    • Developing proprietary blockchain infrastructure (wallets, Web3 loyalty
      tokens, on-chain booking records)
    • Accelerating global expansion of Webus’s mobility platform

    And while XRP-based treasuries remain rare (Bitcoin still dominates the corporate
    treasury scene), Webus’s move signals rising institutional curiosity. In fact, this announcement comes after VivoPower
    International revealed its own $121M treasury plans — a trend worth
    watching.

    Market Reaction: XRP Stays… Yawn… Flat

    Here’s the kicker: despite the headline-grabbing $300M bid, XRP’s price
    barely moved.

    The markets appeared less than thrilled (screenshot).

    Crypto markets didn’t exactly throw a ticker-tape
    parade for Webus. But that’s not entirely surprising: the plan
    remains non-binding and is contingent on due diligence and final documentation.
    Nothing has been purchased yet, and no timeline for closing the financing has
    been disclosed.

    Still, institutional interest is percolating. XRP has notched recent
    wins, including a CME futures listing, and the
    first ETF from Volatility Shares. Multiple spot ETF applications
    are also pending with the SEC.

    Translation: even if markets aren’t pumping on this news, institutional
    validation of XRP is creeping forward.

    Will Corporates Warm Up to XRP Treasuries?

    Corporate adoption of XRP as a treasury asset remains nascent — this is
    no MicroStrategy Bitcoin repeat (yet). But Webus’s move, combined with
    VivoPower’s, suggests that XRP’s utility-driven thesis (cheap cross-border
    payments) is resonating in certain verticals.

    And Webus isn’t exactly a crypto-native firm — this is an AI-powered
    mobility player looking to integrate blockchain to solve real-world payment
    problems across its chauffeur networks and Tongcheng partnership.

    If this bet pays off, expect more non-crypto firms to explore XRP or
    similar tokens for niche treasury and operational use cases.

    For now, XRP holders may have to settle for potential, not pumps. But
    in an increasingly multi-chain, multi-asset world, watching which corporates
    back which tokens could soon matter more than watching price charts alone.



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    #Webus #Bets #300M #XRP #Fuel #Payments