Ripple is making interesting moves. It has evolved its payment platform from a simple remittance tool into a full-stack infrastructure that supports both fiat currencies and stablecoins.



Until now, when companies wanted to do cross-border payments, they had to combine multiple vendors—one for custody, another for foreign exchange, a separate one for stablecoin liquidity, and yet another for local payments. It was cumbersome, and the integration costs were significant.

Ripple is trying to solve this problem all at once by acquiring two companies, Palisade and Rail. Palisade handles custody and financial automation, while Rail provides virtual accounts and collection features. This enables acceptance of payments in both fiat and stablecoins through virtual accounts. Automatic conversion and settlement are also integrated.

According to the announcement, this platform already handles over $100 billion in transactions. The increasing adoption of stablecoins is likely a factor behind this growth. After all, about 30% of all on-chain transaction volume last year involved stablecoins.

Interestingly, this timing is separate from XRP’s price movements. Although XRP faced some pressure recently, its payment business has been progressing steadily and independently. The adoption trajectory among enterprises continues regardless of the spot market trends.

Monica Long’s statement is quite telling: “Building a blockchain-based enterprise solution that can operate globally for regulated financial institutions.” In other words, they aim to create infrastructure that handles digital assets with the same rigor as traditional finance.

Personally, I think this strategic shift is important in the long run. Practical solutions like virtual accounts are where blockchain technology’s true value can be realized. It may not be flashy, but the steady adoption by institutional investors suggests this is the right path.
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