The Fed is building competition for XRP’s core payments use case into the FedNow banking system

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The market may be pricing XRP through an outdated lens.

Over the past several days, the most consequential development around XRP has come from outside crypto. On April 8, the Federal Reserve proposed allowing U.S. banks and credit unions to use intermediaries through the FedNow Service, a change the central bank said could support private-sector cross-border payment solutions.

In the Fed’s own proposal details, the logic is explicit. Banks could use an intermediary, such as a correspondent bank, for the international portion of a transaction and use FedNow for the domestic U.S. leg.

That is a narrow regulatory change on paper. In practice, it reaches directly into the operational space XRP has spent years trying to own, faster movement of money across borders with fewer delays, less friction, and lower dependence on idle pre-funded capital.

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That is where the market tension starts. XRP still trades with a utility narrative attached to it. Ripple’s own description of XRP presents the asset as infrastructure for global payments, with settlement in three to five seconds and transaction costs measured in fractions of a cent. XRPL’s overview goes further and describes XRP as a currency bridge inside the network’s decentralized exchange. Those points have supported the asset’s core pitch for years.

If cross-border payments remain slow, expensive, and operationally fragmented, the case for a neutral bridge asset retains intuitive force. Once major payment rails begin solving more of that friction inside the regulated banking stack, the question changes. The issue becomes less about whether XRP can do the job and more about whether the job is becoming less scarce.

That shift carries immediate force because it lands outside crypto-native circles. People who do not trade XRP still understand the pain point. They have waited for international transfers, absorbed opaque FX costs, dealt with cut-off times, or discovered that a simple cross-border payment can still carry an unpleasant amount of uncertainty.

XRP built a following by sitting directly in that frustration. The latest Fed move suggests the incumbents are working on the same problem with the advantages they already hold, bank relationships, regulatory standing, and direct access to domestic settlement infrastructure.

For XRP holders, that creates a far more uncomfortable frame than the familiar regulatory argument. A token can survive a long court fight and still face a harder competitive landscape when the legacy system upgrades the very function that made the token feel unique.

Swift and central bank rails are reducing the scarcity value of the XRP payments thesis

The Fed proposal would be important on its own. It becomes more significant when it sits next to what is already happening in global payment plumbing.

On March 5, Swift said more than 25 banks had committed to processing payments under its new framework by June, spanning corridors across Australia, Bangladesh, Canada, China, Germany, India, Pakistan, Spain, Thailand, the UK, and the US. Swift said recipients in five of the world’s ten largest remittance markets would be among the first to benefit.

The offer to customers is also easy to understand, certainty of cost, full-value delivery, the fastest possible speeds, including instant settlement where possible, and end-to-end traceability. Each of those features addresses a pain point long associated with the XRP pitch. Each of them also arrives through institutions that already dominate the movement of regulated fiat money.

The competitive implication here is sharper than the usual view that banks are borrowing crypto ideas. XRP drew attention because it sat in the gap between what finance needed and what finance’s existing rails were failing to deliver.

That gap is now narrowing. It is narrowing from the top down, through central bank policy changes and network-level reforms, and from the corridor level, where banks are promising more certainty on speed, value, and visibility. The user experience improvements do not need to be identical to XRP’s model to affect XRP’s premium. They only need to be good enough to reduce the urgency of switching to a bridge asset.

Recent settlement data from the Bank of England adds scale to that point. In March 2026, CHAPS processed 4.7 million payments worth £9.2 trillion over 22 settlement days, with an average daily value of £418 billion.

Those numbers describe an incumbent system that still moves enormous value every day, and one that is modernizing while continuing to carry the trust of large financial institutions. The practical implication is easy to grasp.

The same institutions that once looked slow, layered, and expensive are investing real effort into becoming faster and more predictable. They are doing it inside regulated infrastructure, with existing customers, and at systemic scale.

That is where the angle around XRP becomes fresh again. The usual framing asks whether banks will ever use XRP more aggressively. A more revealing question asks what happens to XRP’s narrative if banks and central bank-connected rails can deliver a large share of the same customer outcome without needing XRP at all.

Utility in payments has never been an abstract concept. It is a solution to a workflow problem. Once that workflow begins improving inside the incumbent stack, investors have to think about moat compression. XRP can still have utility under that setup. It can still move value quickly. It can still serve specialized corridors and liquidity functions. The broader premium tied to rebuilding global payments becomes harder to defend when the present system is already starting to absorb that function.

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