Where Will XRP Be in 5 Years?

Source The Motley Fool

Key Points

  • XRP's next five years will see it attempt to build on its recent successes in stablecoins and institutional services.

  • It already has competition in those domains, and it'll soon have even more.

  • Ripple just secured a big outside investment that will help to advance the network.

  • 10 stocks we like better than XRP ›

It's a perpetual truth of the market that most investors overestimate what can happen in six months and underestimate what can happen in five years. That goes double in the fast-paced world of crypto.

For XRP (CRYPTO: XRP), the next five years will likely be defined by whether Ripple can make good on its ambitions to turn the XRP Ledger (XRPL) into a one-stop toolkit for banks, payment companies, asset managers, and other financial institutions. With a new roadmap unveiled at an annual Ripple conference, a fresh $500 million strategic investment into the company by major financial businesses, and the rapid rise of the Ripple USD (CRYPTO: RLUSD) stablecoin, the company is clearly betting big on that role and securing the capital it needs to implement all of the pieces.

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So, here is how the next chapter could play out for this coin.

Two investors look at a wall with many readouts stapled to it.

Image source: Getty Images.

Ripple wants to be the institutional crypto toolkit

At Ripple's annual Swell 2025 event held in early November, Ripple president Monica Long laid out a plan for the company that has major implications for XRP's future.

One division of Ripple focuses on developing financial products for institutions, while the other advances the XRP Ledger itself, ensuring it remains an attractive platform for managing capital and processing payments. Specifically, Long highlighted that the XRPL has added performance and feature upgrades in recent years, and she previewed a new lending protocol aimed at giving businesses more ways to use XRP rather than just hold it.

Within five years, expect that lending protocol to launch, and expect Ripple to continue to do its best to place XRP in the hands of customers who could benefit from using it.

Importantly, the chain's roadmap now has a serious war chest behind it. Ripple announced a $500 million strategic investment led by funds associated with Fortress Investment Group and Citadel Securities, among others, valuing the company at $40 billion. Furthermore, Ripple reports that total payment volume running through its network has surpassed $95 billion, and that its stablecoin RLUSD has already crossed a $1 billion market cap less than a year after its launch. The odds are very good that in five years, both of those figures will be dramatically larger.

The idea is to turn Ripple into the default vendor for an institution that wants to issue a stablecoin, move money across borders, custody digital assets, and source liquidity for crypto markets, all from one stack. If that plan works, the XRPL will become the shared settlement layer where those flows ultimately land, and XRP is one of the native assets that those systems will rely on for bridging and liquidity.

The market will still be quite crowded

The bull thesis for XRP from now into late 2030 is in good shape, but that doesn't mean it'll be smooth sailing. There are already plenty of competitors in its field, both inside and outside of the crypto sector, and there will only be more in the coming years.

Before even getting into the challenge to XRP that other blockchains could mount, even Ripple's stablecoin bid is best understood as one entrant among many others. Competitors like USDT and USDC dominate stablecoins today, and they're both dramatically larger than RLUSD by market cap, which probably won't change anytime soon.

Looking at its competitor networks, many of the possible arenas for future growth, like real-world asset (RWA) tokenization and cash management projects, are anchored on Ethereum and other smart contract platforms. That means XRP is still a challenger chain, not an incumbent that's in a position to rest on its laurels.

There is also a separate tension that investors need to acknowledge. If RLUSD becomes the primary settlement asset that institutions hold and move on XRPL -- which those institutions would probably prefer instead of using XRP itself -- it could dampen some demand for XRP as a transactional token even if it's still needed for paying gas fees.

The base case is that Ripple continues to execute its plan, which enables RLUSD to grow into a mid-tier stablecoin, potentially capturing a low single-digit share of the global stablecoin market. In that world, XRPL would likely hold substantially more tokenized cash and financial assets than it does today, and XRP would probably remain a top-tier coin that benefits from higher usage and growing institutional comfort with the brand.

If Ripple manages even a modest version of its plan, XRP is likely to be more entrenched and more valuable by the early 2030s compared to where it is today.

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Alex Carchidi has positions in Ethereum. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Ethereum and XRP. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
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