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XRP Quietly Switches On Native Lending Market

2h ago
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According to Dr. Kamilah Stevenson, the XRP Ledger upgrade to version 3.1.3 has activated two core features: “single asset vaults” and a “lending protocol.”

These are not smart contracts deployed by a third-party app, but rules embedded directly into the ledger’s code.

Vaults are described as digital containers with strict, predefined rules: what asset can be deposited, what can be lent out, who can borrow, and under what terms. A “single asset vault” holds only one asset type — for example, one vault for XRP, another for USD-backed tokens, another for other digital assets.

The explicit design goal is isolation: if something goes wrong in one vault, the problem is contained and “cannot spread across the rest of the network.”

The lending protocol is the rulebook governing how loans are created, collateralized, and enforced. It defines eligibility, collateral requirements, and what happens upon default, with the key distinction that these rules are part of the XRP Ledger itself rather than adjustable by a single company. “Every loan that happens on the XRP Ledger has to follow them,” the host notes.

Further on, Stevenson emphasizes that loans issued through this system are meant to be underwritten, not handed out “blindly.”

Underwriting here refers to assessing whether a borrower can realistically repay before capital is deployed — a process meant to distinguish this from “crypto casino” lending where unmeasured risk is passed to retail depositors chasing high yields.

She highlights one early institutional signal: Evernorth, described as a company holding more than 400 million XRP in treasury, has “publicly committed to deploying its position through this exact lending protocol.”

The firm’s chief business officer is quoted as calling it a “multi-billion dollar yield opportunity for the XRP community.”

While the YouTube episode does not provide documentation beyond this claim, the host frames it as real treasury capital, not just marketing, preparing to move into the new pools.

This is what “institutional-grade credit” looks like on-chain: single-asset, risk-isolated vaults, underwritten loans, and rules enforced at the protocol level rather than by discretionary smart contracts.

Conceptually, Kamilah Stevenson compares the new system to traditional banking: depositors provide capital, borrowers pay interest, but instead of a bank capturing the spread, “the interest flows back to the depositors.”

In her view, the XRP Ledger is evolving from a pure settlement network — moving value from point A to point B — into a network where value can “sit and work while it waits.”

The YouTube show host also draws a parallel with Bitcoin’s path to institutional adoption.

She likens this controlled, underwritten lending system to the first regulated Bitcoin futures ETFs: a “boring,” institution-friendly first step that precedes more retail-facing products and, potentially, larger capital flows.

For market watchers, the main takeaway here that XRP’s on-ledger functionality is expanding in ways aimed squarely at institutions rather than speculative DeFi.

If capital at the scale suggested by the Evernorth example does enter these vaults, XRP’s role in crypto credit markets — not just payments — could become materially more significant.

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