Crypto commentator X Finance Bull (@Xfinancebull) recently published a post arguing that the financial system hides “an embarrassing secret,” which is why XRP exists.
To send money across borders, the post says, banks must park enormous sums in foreign accounts around the world, capital that sits idle while it waits to be used.
The post ties this problem to XRP, arguing the token could function as a digital version of the IMF’s Special Drawing Right. It also points to a real transaction as evidence. On May 6, JPMorgan, Mastercard, Ripple, and Ondo Finance completed a settlement using the XRP Ledger.
The IMF created the Special Drawing Right decades ago to ease cross-border friction. The SDR works as a reserve asset built from a basket of major currencies USD, EUR, CNY, JPY, and GBP. X Finance Bull’s post describes it as a solid idea built for the wrong era, noting it was never built for real-time settlement.
He laid out a comparison. The traditional SDR sits with the IMF, tied to a fixed basket of five currencies. XRP, which the post labels an E-SDR, is described differently. It’s a neutral reserve asset not restricted by any single jurisdiction, fully exchangeable for every major currency, and built for instant, atomic settlement on a blockchain.
X Finance Bull’s post points to a specific event as evidence for the comparison. JPMorgan, Mastercard, Ripple, and Ondo Finance completed a cross-border redemption of tokenized U.S. Treasuries on the XRP Ledger. Ripple redeemed Ondo’s OUSG token, an instrument backed by short-term Treasuries, and the asset leg cleared on the XRP Ledger in under 5 seconds.
Mastercard’s Multi-Token Network routed payment instructions to JPMorgan’s Kinexys platform, which delivered dollars to Ripple’s bank account in Singapore.
Ondo Finance said the transaction was the first near-real-time redemption of its kind to work across both borders and banks. It happened outside standard banking hours, the window where traditional settlement rails typically pause for one to three business days.
X Finance Bull’s post links the settlement test to a broader case for XRP. As central banks build out CBDCs, the post argues they will need a neutral bridge asset not tied to any single country’s currency or policy. The post presents the traditional SDR as having solved the neutrality problem without solving the speed problem, and presents XRP as the solution to both by acting as the E-SDR.
The post’s closing argument is that if institutions keep testing XRP as a settlement bridge, the trillions in capital currently parked to support cross-border payments could start moving through faster rails instead.
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