The post Can XRP Hit $500? appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
If you are an investor who spends a lot of time in XRP (CRYPTO:XRP) circles, you must’ve run into a certain price forecast over and over—$500. It’s the price that would turn a small stake into a fortune, and people repeat it so often that it starts to feel like it might actually happen one day. For anyone holding a few thousand XRP tokens, the dream is hard to ignore.
However, the thing about a price target is that it only means something once you work out what it would make the whole token worth. And once you do that for the XRP price at $500, the projection starts looking very ridiculous.
So let’s work through it. We’ll look at whether XRP hitting $500 is even possible, where this oddly specific price prediction came from in the first place, and what XRP could realistically be worth instead.
A cryptocurrency’s price on its own tells you almost nothing. What matters is the market cap behind it, which is the price multiplied by every XRP token in existence. With around 62 billion XRP in circulation today, a $500 XRP price would put its market cap at roughly $31 trillion.
That number is almost impossible to picture, so let’s compare it to something we know. All the gold ever mined, every bar, coin, and necklace on the planet, is worth somewhere around $30 trillion. So, XRP at $500 would be worth about as much as all the gold in the world.
It would also be close to 14 times the size of the entire crypto market today, which is worth around $2.2 trillion. That means one coin would be worth more than every other cryptocurrency combined several times over—and that’s using today’s supply.
Ripple still holds tens of billions of tokens in escrow, so by the time they’re all released, a $500 XRP price would translate to a market cap closer to $50 trillion. So, we aren’t talking about a stretch target here, but a number bigger than anything that has ever existed.
The $500 XRP price projection came from Shannon Thorp, a treasury manager at Wells Fargo. She argued a few years ago that XRP’s price needed to align with the global cross-border payments market. The Bank of England had projected that market would reach about $250 trillion a year by 2027, so she figured that since XRP is built to move that money, its price has to be big enough to handle the load.
On the surface, it sounds reasonable, but the hole in that logic is the difference between money moving through something and money actually in it. A payment network carries value from one side to the other, but it doesn’t hold that value on its books. Visa is the best example. It processes more than $14 trillion in payments every year, yet the company itself is worth about $600 billion, not $14 trillion. So, the cash flows through, but it doesn’t pile up inside.
XRP works the same way in Ripple’s network. Even if it ends up moving trillions across borders, the same tokens get used again and again, thousands of times a day. The volume can be gigantic while the XRP price stays ordinary. That one mix-up, treating money that flows through XRP as if it had to be stored in XRP, is what powers almost every sky-high price target you’ll ever see for it.
Clearing $500 off the table doesn’t mean XRP is going nowhere. Most analysts who follow XRP closely put it somewhere between $5 and $15 by 2030. That would be a huge return from today’s price, just nowhere near three figures.
The most bullish credible voice belongs to Standard Chartered, one of the few major banks that publishes XRP targets. Its analyst sees XRP reaching $28 by 2030, and even that comes with heavy conditions.
The bank states the CLARITY Act, the bill that would classify XRP as a commodity under federal law, has to pass. Then, ETF money has to keep flowing past the current $1 billion range to $4-8 billion. And XRP itself has to become part of how banks settle payments. Even at $28, XRP’s market cap would be around $1.7 trillion, roughly where Bitcoin peaked—and the $500 target is still nearly twenty times beyond that.
It helps to remember where XRP actually trades right now. At around $1.15, it’s down about 43% over the past year, and in a nervous market it has struggled to push past $1.45 all year since dropping below it.
We don’t think XRP would hit $500 in any timeframe worth planning around. A $500 price would need a world that doesn’t exist yet, one where a single token is worth as much as all the gold on earth and the crypto market has grown many times over. Even the most bullish forecast from a major bank tops out near $28.
Here’s the one thing worth taking from all this, because it works on every wild crypto prediction you’ll ever see. Take the target, multiply it by the number of coins, and check that figure against something concrete like gold or the stock market. If the answer is bigger than the largest assets on earth, it’s a fantasy, not a forecast.
XRP has a genuine future, but it’s one measured in single digits and maybe tens of dollars down the line, not hundreds.
Retirement planning doesn’t have to feel overwhelming. The key is finding expert guidance, and SmartAsset’s simple quiz makes it easier than ever for you to connect with a vetted financial advisor. Here’s how:
Answer a Few Simple Questions.
Get Matched with Vetted Advisors
Choose Your Fit
Why wait? Start building the retirement you’ve always dreamed of. Get started today! (sponsor)
The post Can XRP Hit $500? appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


