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New Pitch Frames XRP As Mathematically Scarce While Rivals Inflate

2d ago
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The host starts with a familiar comparison: fiat inflation. More dollars printed, less purchasing power per unit. Then they apply the same logic to crypto networks that rely on miners, validators, or stakers.

According to Kamilah Stevenson, chains like Ethereum, Solana, BNB, Dogecoin and Bitcoin must continuously issue new coins to pay those who secure the network. “Every new coin created dilutes the ones that you already have,” she says, calling this a form of ongoing, protocol-level inflation that many retail holders ignore.

Stevenson acknowledges this doesn’t automatically make those assets bad investments – rising demand can still overpower supply growth – but insists the math is “quietly, consistently” working against long-term holders.

XRP is structurally different. Each transaction on the XRP Ledger destroys a tiny amount of XRP rather than paying it to validators. Roughly 15 million XRP have been burned so far, a small fraction of total supply, but the key point is the direction of travel: “Every single day, the total amount of XRP in the world is lower than it was the day before.”

The video’s central contrast is incentive design. On most large networks, if new coins stop being created, there is no economic reason for miners or stakers to keep the network running. “They’re trapped,” the host argues, tied to perpetual inflationary rewards.

On the XRP Ledger, validators do not earn XRP at all, according to the video. Instead, banks, financial institutions and technology companies allegedly run validator nodes because “having a seat at the table of this infrastructure is valuable enough on its own.”

With no block rewards and no new XRP issuance, supply can only move in one direction: down, via transaction burning.

Dr. Kamilah Stevenson ties this to a broader thesis: if institutional cross-border settlements, AI agents, and other enterprise use cases start using XRP at scale, demand could increase while supply simultaneously decreases.

“Most assets work where increased demand drives price up,” Stevenson says. “XRP works where increased demand drives the price up and drives supply down at the same time.”

Bitcoin, in this framing, tops out at a fixed supply but does not burn existing coins; gold can still be mined, adding to supply.

Ultimately, XRP is presented as “the only major asset where the supply is actively shrinking every single day as the direct result of the network being used.” That claim may be debated among tokenomics researchers, but it underpins the video’s pitch.

Beyond token mechanics, the host shifts to strategy, urging U.S. investors who buy into this deflationary thesis to consider holding XRP in a Roth IRA via a specific crypto IRA provider, aiming to avoid future capital gains taxes if the asset appreciates.

She disclosed holding XRP along with HBAR, XTC, SHX and Quant in that structure, and reference a $100 funding bonus for new accounts.

The video ends on psychology rather than price targets. The host says many people fail not because they chose the wrong coin, but because they lacked a plan when volatility and negative narratives hit.

The “deflationary math” and multiple demand stories are framed as part of a conviction framework, but the emphasis is on building a personal plan around stack size, cost basis, timeline and tax structure, rather than trading headlines.

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2d ago
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