As Ripple Prime officially announced an integration with crypto platform EDX Markets, CEO Michael Higgins confirmed that the partnership gives clients unified access to spot markets and perpetual futures through a single framework with centralized clearing and netting.
However, the launch of this institutional mechanism exposed a strategic compromise, and instead of XRP, the primary settlement and margin asset of the deal will be the stablecoin Ripple USD (RLUSD).
For traditional heavyweights behind EDX, including Citadel Securities and Fidelity Investments, the use of dollar-backed stablecoins is effectively the only acceptable standard for minimizing volatility. As a result, RLUSD, a product designed to serve Wall Street, effectively leaves the volatile XRP outside the marketing narrative.
This naturally raised questions about whether the company’s core token is being reduced to a secondary asset.
Why is XRP sitting out the headline?
Apparently, the tension around this issue can no longer be ignored, and the day after the announcement, Evernorth Treasury, the largest institutional holder of XRP, published a technical manifesto titled “Why RLUSD Can’t Replace XRP”.
In short, the authors emphasize that the absence of XRP from front-facing agreements at the EDX level is not a rejection of the token, but the result of a fundamental separation in architecture. The difference between the assets is divided across two key fronts:
- RLUSD is an outer-layer instrument and a regulated facade, as the stablecoin is ideal as a digital dollar for margin collateral. However, it remains vulnerable to compliance requirements. The issuer is obligated to freeze wallets upon requests from authorities, while the asset itself remains tightly tied to banking reserves and regulatory risks.
- XRP is a neutral bridge inside the ledger, an untouchable engine that is decentralized and cannot be frozen or sanctioned, which makes it the only viable bridge for instant conversion between heterogeneous assets underneath the system’s infrastructure.
For conservative exchanges and external regulators, Ripple presents a familiar and compromise-friendly dollar layer in the form of RLUSD. XRP itself is increasingly moving behind the scenes and apparently no longer seeks the role of the flagship settlement asset for Wall Street.





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