Crypto enthusiast Paul White Gold Eagle has amplified recent remarks from Brad Garlinghouse regarding the future of cross-border payments.
His post emphasized Garlinghouse’s declaration that the era of 24-hour transfers is ending and that transactions will soon settle in seconds. He also stressed that XRP will serve as the bridge asset in this transition.
The tweet centered on a video clip in which Garlinghouse explains how XRP is being used to improve international money movement. The message’s focus was clear: traditional correspondent banking is slow and capital-intensive. Also, the digital asset’s liquidity is a faster and more efficient alternative.
In the attached video, Garlinghouse describes XRP as a digital asset comparable in category to Bitcoin. He notes that XRP ranks among the most valuable digital assets by market capitalization. From there, he explains how cross-border payments typically work under the correspondent banking model.
According to Garlinghouse, banks sending money internationally must pre-fund accounts at foreign institutions. For example, a U.S. bank transferring funds to a U.K. bank would need to hold reserves in pounds at the receiving institution. Those funds often remain idle until used, locking up capital and increasing costs.
Garlinghouse states that XRP changes this structure by allowing banks and payment providers to access on-demand liquidity. Instead of maintaining dormant balances overseas, institutions can tap into existing XRP liquidity pools.
He explains that there is significant liquidity between XRP and the U.S. dollar and the British pound. By using this liquidity, value can be transferred in real time without the need for pre-funded accounts.
Garlinghouse also addresses transaction speed. He contrasts XRP’s settlement time with Bitcoin, noting that Bitcoin transactions can take up to 12 minutes to complete. In comparison, XRP transactions settle in roughly three seconds. He argues that this speed makes XRP highly scalable and suitable for enterprise-level payment systems.
He adds that consumers are not required to understand the technical process behind the transaction. The routing through XRP occurs in the background. According to Garlinghouse, customers’ experience is a faster and more cost-effective payment service.
Garlinghouse further states that adoption is gaining momentum. He says the company is seeing more activity than ever in using XRP to move liquidity globally. While acknowledging uncertainty and doubt within the digital asset market, he emphasizes that XRP’s application in payments addresses a tangible problem for financial institutions and their customers.
Paul White Gold Eagle’s post presents these remarks as evidence that near-instant settlement is becoming a practical reality, with XRP positioned to facilitate that shift in global payments infrastructure.
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