Crypto 📈XRP Lags Bitcoin and Ethereum in Corporate Treasury Adoption

XRP Lags Bitcoin and Ethereum in Corporate Treasury Adoption

For years, Ripple’s XRP token was pitched as the currency of efficiency—a bridge for banks, a tool for liquidity, and a faster lane for cross-border settlements. Yet as corporations begin quietly stocking their balance sheets with crypto, the story playing out is less flattering. Bitcoin and Ethereum are getting the nod. XRP, despite its speed and liquidity promises, is lagging behind.

The Rise of Corporate Treasuries in Crypto

Corporate treasuries didn’t rush into crypto overnight. It started with a trickle: a few bold names experimenting with Bitcoin as “digital gold.” Tesla, Square (now Block), and MicroStrategy made headlines, but the real shift happened in boardrooms far from Twitter drama. Executives, under pressure to hedge inflation or diversify risk, began treating crypto allocations like long-term strategy rather than headline stunts.

Bitcoin fit easily into that narrative. It’s simple. Limited supply, high liquidity, a brand that even non-crypto investors recognize. Ethereum came next, not as a store of value but as a bet on infrastructure. For companies building on blockchain—whether through tokenized assets, smart contracts, or DeFi integrations—Ethereum represented future rails, not just a speculative coin.

Where’s XRP in This Mix?

That’s the uncomfortable part. For all the talk of utility, XRP hasn’t been embraced the same way. Yes, it offers fast settlement times. Yes, Ripple has inked deals with banks and payment providers. But when it comes to corporate treasuries—the conservative corner of finance that prizes clarity above all—XRP faces hurdles.

The elephant in the room is regulatory baggage. The long SEC battle over whether XRP is a security left scars. Even though Ripple scored partial legal clarity in 2023, the overhang lingers. Treasurers don’t want to explain to audit committees why they’re holding an asset that regulators once tried to shut down.

Then there’s liquidity optics. Bitcoin trades in volumes that dwarf other assets, making it easy to enter or exit positions without moving markets. Ethereum, with its thriving ecosystem, feels like a bet on tech infrastructure as much as a currency. XRP, by contrast, doesn’t have the same narrative power outside Ripple’s orbit.

The Human Side of Hesitation

Talk to corporate finance teams and the feedback is consistent. Bitcoin feels safe—not in price volatility, but in legitimacy. “It’s the one asset everyone agrees is crypto’s gold standard,” one CFO put it bluntly. Ethereum appeals to tech-savvy executives eager to align with blockchain’s next phase. XRP, though? It sparks questions. Why not Bitcoin? Why not Ethereum? What’s the upside beyond niche payment use cases?

Even for firms intrigued by XRP’s efficiency, the story isn’t sticky enough. Treasury committees don’t just need utility—they need board-level conviction. Bitcoin and Ethereum deliver that; XRP hasn’t cracked the code.

What Could Change

It would be unwise to write XRP out of the script. The global payments market is enormous, and Ripple’s partnerships—from Asia to the Middle East—are still growing. If cross-border rails settle into XRP as a standard, corporate treasuries might follow. But it’s an uphill road.

For now, the corporate treasury market is writing a clear first chapter: Bitcoin as the hedge, Ethereum as the infrastructure bet. XRP may yet have a role, but it’s not the headline act.

And in the high-stakes, slow-moving world of corporate balance sheets, being late to the stage can make all the difference.

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