⬤ XRP’s back in the spotlight as Ripple’s transformation from blockchain payments provider to banking competitor picks up speed. The company’s been on an acquisition spree, and it’s completely changed how people think about XRP’s potential role in global finance.
⬤ Ripple didn’t hold back in 2025. April brought the $1.25 billion Hidden Road deal—now rebranded as Ripple Prime—a multi-asset prime brokerage handling around $3 trillion in annual transactions. Then came Rail for $200 million in August, GTreasury for $1 billion in October, and Palisade shortly after. By December, Ripple scored conditional approval for a bank charter. That’s not just expansion—it’s repositioning.
Ripple’s acquisitions have reshaped perception from a pure blockchain payments provider to a potential competitor to banks in treasury services, cross-border payments, and custody.
⬤ Here’s where it gets interesting. With XRP trading near $1.91, analysts using a liquidity-based framework sketched out what could happen if Ripple actually disrupts traditional banking. The moderate scenario? XRP hits $12.50 to $18.00 within five years, matching Standard Chartered’s 2028 forecast and pushing market cap to roughly $1.1 trillion. If Ripple snags about 10% of global daily settlement volume, you’re looking at $25 to $50. The moonshot scenario—where legacy payment systems get replaced entirely—puts XRP above $100.
⬤ What matters here isn’t hype. It’s that these projections tie XRP’s value to actual liquidity demand in global settlement markets, not retail trading frenzy. But there’s friction ahead: competition from stablecoins like Ripple’s own RLUSD, central banks that prefer private ledgers, and U.S. regulatory wildcards including the GENIUS Act. XRP’s long-term trajectory depends less on price predictions and more on whether Ripple can execute its banking play while navigating regulatory hurdles and competitive pressure.
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XRP Price News: $12.50–$100 Scenarios Emerge as Ripple Expands Banking Role
⬤ XRP’s back in the spotlight as Ripple’s transformation from blockchain payments provider to banking competitor picks up speed. The company’s been on an acquisition spree, and it’s completely changed how people think about XRP’s potential role in global finance.
⬤ Ripple didn’t hold back in 2025. April brought the $1.25 billion Hidden Road deal—now rebranded as Ripple Prime—a multi-asset prime brokerage handling around $3 trillion in annual transactions. Then came Rail for $200 million in August, GTreasury for $1 billion in October, and Palisade shortly after. By December, Ripple scored conditional approval for a bank charter. That’s not just expansion—it’s repositioning.
⬤ Here’s where it gets interesting. With XRP trading near $1.91, analysts using a liquidity-based framework sketched out what could happen if Ripple actually disrupts traditional banking. The moderate scenario? XRP hits $12.50 to $18.00 within five years, matching Standard Chartered’s 2028 forecast and pushing market cap to roughly $1.1 trillion. If Ripple snags about 10% of global daily settlement volume, you’re looking at $25 to $50. The moonshot scenario—where legacy payment systems get replaced entirely—puts XRP above $100.
⬤ What matters here isn’t hype. It’s that these projections tie XRP’s value to actual liquidity demand in global settlement markets, not retail trading frenzy. But there’s friction ahead: competition from stablecoins like Ripple’s own RLUSD, central banks that prefer private ledgers, and U.S. regulatory wildcards including the GENIUS Act. XRP’s long-term trajectory depends less on price predictions and more on whether Ripple can execute its banking play while navigating regulatory hurdles and competitive pressure.