The fragmentation thesis: why more bank stablecoins may actually help XRP

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Here is the version of the XRP story you do not usually hear. It is not about XRP defeating SWIFT. It is not about Ripple “winning” cross-border payments.

The more interesting argument right now is quieter and more structural: if banks keep launching separate stablecoins, the global payment system is going to get more fragmented before it gets simpler, and something will have to sit in the middle of all those isolated pools.

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Can you guess which crypto could be that?

The problem with everyone building their own money

When a bank launches a stablecoin, it creates a new digital form of its own currency on its own rails. That sounds clean and modern.

The problem is that fifty banks doing the same thing do not create one unified digital payment system, but fifty separate ones.

As analyst Jake Claver put it recently on X: “every bank launching a stablecoin is essentially creating another currency that needs to talk to every other currency.”

That fragmentation is the exact interoperability problem a bridge asset is supposed to solve.

Versan Aljarrah of Black Swan Capitalist has framed XRP holders as early participants in the infrastructure of a new payment system, not speculators on a token, but people positioning for a structural role in the plumbing that connects otherwise isolated liquidity pools.

Whether that framing is correct is a separate question, but the logic is coherent: more isolated pools mean more demand for neutral bridging, and XRP was designed precisely for that use case.

Where SWIFT fits in

The more technical version of this argument runs through SWIFT’s own infrastructure moves.

SWIFT announced at Sibos 2025 that it is adding a blockchain-based shared ledger to its core technology stack, developed with over 30 global banks, starting with a Consensys prototype, and designed for real-time 24/7 cross-border payments across more than 200 countries.

Sounds like a new crypto startup making a prediction? No. Sounds like SWIFT itself adapting to a world where tokenized value needs to move, not just messages about it.

One framing that has gained traction among developers puts it plainly: SWIFT could continue as the secure messaging layer, while financial institutions settle value using tokenized assets on networks like the XRP Ledger. Messaging and settlement do not have to live in the same system.

SWIFT handles the instruction, and something else handles the actual movement of value. Under this thesis, XRP’s institutional use case is not as a replacement or substitution for anything, it is as plumbing between pieces that are not otherwise connected.

What the market is actually saying

The structural argument is coherent. Whether it is translating into real demand is a different question.

XRP open interest has dropped 75% from its peak, with derivatives activity now concentrated almost entirely on Binance, and the price was trading roughly 60% below its July 2025 all-time high.

Infrastructure stories almost always run ahead of adoption.

“Logically consistent” and “confirmed by on-chain usage data” are not the same thing, and that gap between an expanding infrastructure narrative and a declining price is the tension every XRP watcher is sitting with heading into Q2 2026.

Shift

If you hold XRP or are thinking about it, the honest framing is this: the institutional thesis has shifted from “XRP will disrupt payments” toward “XRP could become neutral infrastructure for a fragmented system.”

That is a more mature and arguably more defensible argument. It is also one that plays out over years, not quarters. Infrastructure that matters does not usually announce itself with sudden price pumps.

It gets quietly built into systems that most people never see. That is either a reassuring long-term story or a side-note that patience is the real requirement, depending on where you are sitting.

András Mészáros
Written by András Mészáros
Cryptocurrency and Web3 expert, founder of Kriptoworld
LinkedIn | X (Twitter) | More articles

With years of experience covering the blockchain space, András delivers insightful reporting on DeFi, tokenization, altcoins, and crypto regulations shaping the digital economy.

📅 Published: March 24, 2026 • 🕓 Last updated: March 24, 2026
✉️ Contact: [email protected]


Disclosure:This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.

Kriptoworld.com accepts no liability for any errors in the articles or for any financial loss resulting from incorrect information.

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