Showcasing the use of cryptocurrency in monetary transfers, Ripple has become a known partner for traditional institutions that wish to revamp their cross-border remittance services. Taking this vision further, Ripple announced a new partnership with Japan’s SBI Remit to transform remittance payments from Japan to the Philippines.

Ripple’s latest partnership will see the involvement of mobile payments service Coins.ph and digital asset exchange platform SBI VC Trade to provide a cheaper remittance option to its customers. This will be made possible by using XRP to eliminate the pre-funding costs.

According to the official statement, Japan’s first On-Demand Liquidity (ODL) service implementation helps Ripple to drive the adoption of crypto-enabled services. Nobuo Ando, representative director of SBI Remit, stated:

“The launch of ODL in Japan is just the start, and we look forward to continuing to push into the next frontier of financial innovation, beyond real-time payments in just the Philippines, but to other parts of the region as well.”

This announcement stays in line with Ripple’s intent to expand its services for the Asia-Pacific (APAC) markets as it continues to see transactions growing 130% year-over-year. A recent report also showed that Ripple’s XRP sales shot up 97% in Q1, running parallel to the rising demand for its ODL service

Related: It is time for the US to create a ‘Ripple test’ for crypto

Despite Ripple’s conflict with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission pertaining to the XRP securities lawsuit, Ripple frontman Brad Garlinghouse informed that the company had not suffered any setbacks in the APAC region. 

“We have been able to continue to grow the business in Asia and Japan because we’ve had regulatory clarity in those markets,” Garlinghouse said.

Ripple recently appointed a new managing director to plan out its roadmap to expand in the Southeast Asian region.

By involving former Uber executive Brooks Entwistle, Ripple’s Southeast Asia wing doubled down on its expansion plans against the market’s “fairly complex, country-specific schemes.”