The post Why XRP Could Be More Important Than Anyone Realised: DTCC, Mastercard and DBS Explained appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News
XRP is trading at $1.43, up 3.31% today. Bitcoin is at $72,535 and Ethereum sits at $2,131. The market is having a good Friday. But the price action today is almost a distraction from something much bigger that has been quietly building in the background, and almost nobody in retail is paying attention to it.
The Swift Story Was Too Small
One expert said that for years the entire XRP thesis rested on one idea: Ripple replaces Swift, banks adopt XRP, cross-border payments explode and holders get rich. It was a clean narrative. It was also the wrong one.
Not because XRP failed. But because the world moved on to much larger problems. While retail investors were still debating Swift, the global financial system began rebuilding itself from the inside. Corporate treasury operations, institutional settlement infrastructure, and tokenised capital markets emerged as the real battleground. And the demand for instant liquidity networks exploded, not from remittances, but from boardrooms.
CFOs at major corporations are now asking a question that would have sounded absurd five years ago: why are we still moving money like it is 1995? The answer is driving them toward digital asset rails that offer instant settlement, 24/7 liquidity, programmable payments, and global interoperability. Networks like the XRP Ledger.
The Numbers That Change Everything
Here is the number that reframes the entire XRP story.
CLS, the Continuous Linked Settlement system used daily by JP Morgan, HSBC, Deutsche Bank, and virtually every major global bank, processes $1.5 quadrillion in foreign exchange settlement annually. That is $1,500 trillion moving through a single system every year.
Ripple Prime, its institutional settlement platform, currently processes roughly $3 trillion annually. CLS handles 500 times more volume. But CLS did not start as a quadrillion-dollar system either. It started as infrastructure solving one problem: settlement risk in foreign exchange markets. Over time, every major bank connected to it.
The question is whether digital assets are about to follow the same path.
Three Institutions That Signal What Is Coming
DBS Bank, one of Asia’s largest and repeatedly named the world’s best bank, has been working with Ripple to build blockchain infrastructure for cross-border settlement. The goal is not just faster payments. It is interconnected financial networks, different ledgers, different assets, different rails, all linked through interoperable infrastructure.
Mastercard just launched its Crypto Partner Program and added Mountain and Treasury to its ecosystem. Mountain and Treasury builds the backend systems companies use to move money: vendor payments, treasury automation, liquidity management. Combined with Mastercard’s three billion cards and 95% global merchant reach, that is a direct bridge between traditional finance and digital asset rails, built into existing global payment infrastructure.
The DTCC, the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation, which processes the majority of US stock, bond, and derivative transactions, has announced plans to tokenise its platform in the second half of 2026. That is less than four months away. And a DTCC patent describing cross-ledger liquidity frameworks specifically references XRP and XLM as liquidity tokens. If tokenised asset networks require liquidity bridges between them, that is precisely the role XRP was designed to fill.

