XRP (CRYPTO: XRP) is caught between two narratives. On one side, XRP ETFs have amassed $1.3 billion in assets under management in just 50 days. On the other, Ripple’s On-Demand Liquidity payment layer has processed more than $15 billion in cumulative volume. One drives price through speculation, the other through utility—but which one actually drives the price?
The answer could determine whether XRP is a speculative asset or a fundamentally grounded long-term investment. While ETFs dominate headlines and drive short-term price action, the ODL payment layer represents the infrastructure Ripple has spent years building—but despite that scale, XRP’s price hasn’t reflected it. Understanding the distinction between these two XRP drivers is critical for positioning in 2026.
XRP ETFs vs ODL Payment: Speculation vs Utility
The XRP market is shaped by two powerful but fundamentally different forces. Each represents a distinct form of demand with unique implications for price.
XRP ETFs: Speculative Demand
In just 50 days since launch, XRP ETFs have amassed over $1.3 billion in AUM, with $483 million in inflows in December alone. These ETFs, offered by Grayscale, Bitwise, Canary Capital, and Franklin Templeton, have collectively locked up over 746 million XRP. This creates a measurable supply squeeze—tokens are removed from circulation and held in custodial accounts to back ETF shares.
ETFs don’t use XRP for payments or settlement. They simply track its price. Their impact is purely demand-side, attracting capital from investors seeking exposure without interacting with the XRP Ledger. This demand is speculative as its driven by price expectations rather than utility.
ODL Payment: Real Utility
RippleNet now counts more than 300 financial institutions across 55-plus countries, with roughly 40% actively using XRP for On-Demand Liquidity rather than just messaging rails. ODL processed more than $15 billion of cross-border payments in 2024, a 32% year-over-year increase, with Asia-Pacific accounting for roughly 56% of volume.
In 2025, ODL experienced significant growth—although specific total year figures for ODL are often reported alongside broader “Ripple Payments” metrics. ODL processed approximately $1.3 trillion in transactions in Q2 2025 alone and the cumulative Ripple Payments volume as of January 2026 (which includes ODL) has surpassed $95 billion.
The Core Distinction
ETFs create demand without utility—they drive price by attracting capital but don’t contribute to XRP’s function as a payment asset. ODL payments create utility without guaranteed demand—they demonstrate XRP’s capabilities, but unless institutions hold XRP, that utility doesn’t translate into price support.
At first glance, the payment layer dwarfs the ETF layer. The $15 billion in ODL volume is more than 11 times larger than the $1.3 billion in ETF AUM. But in the global cross-border payments market, estimated at $130-150 trillion annually, $15 billion represents roughly 0.01%, which is a marginal share highlighting how early XRP still is in its adoption curve.
Is RLUSD the Bridge Between Payment Volume and XRP Price?
Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin may be the missing link connecting XRP’s utility to its price. With a market cap exceeding $1.26 billion as of December 2025, RLUSD is the third-largest U.S.-regulated stablecoin positioned for GENIUS Act compliance, behind only USDC and PYUSD.
RLUSD is issued natively on XRPL and Ethereum. As RLUSD adoption grows, it drives XRPL activity, increasing demand for XRP in two key ways. First, XRP facilitates RLUSD cross-border transfers, especially in corridors where direct fiat pairs are unavailable or inefficient. Second, every XRPL transaction incurs a small fee paid in XRP, which is then permanently burned. More RLUSD transactions mean more XRP removed from circulation.
Ripple’s partnership with Mastercard, WebBank, and Gemini to pilot RLUSD for credit card settlements is major validation. This represents one of the first instances of a regulated U.S. bank settling traditional card transactions using a regulated stablecoin on a public blockchain. Credit card settlements represent a $20 trillion TAM. If even a fraction flows through XRPL via RLUSD, the resulting transaction volume and XRP burns could materially affect supply dynamics.
However, RLUSD could still succeed independently without impacting the XRP price. If most RLUSD activity occurs in stablecoin-to-stablecoin transfers or within closed ecosystems, XRP may not be required. In that case, RLUSD’s growth wouldn’t necessarily translate into XRP price appreciation, which would mark a critical risk for investors betting on utility-driven value.
XRP Price Outlook 2026: Where ETF Speculation Meets Payment Utility
XRP enters 2026 with both narratives intact but neither is dominant. ETFs have proven institutional appetite exists—$1.3 billion in 50 days with zero outflow days confirms that. But speculative capital alone creates a fragile price floor. The ODL payment layer offers durability but hasn’t reached the scale needed to drive price, with only 40% of RippleNet institutions using XRP for settlement.
RLUSD could bridge this gap. If the Mastercard pilot succeeds and stablecoin adoption scales, it creates a direct link between payment utility and XRP demand through bridge transactions and fee burns. But RLUSD could also succeed independently without impacting the XRP price.
The sustainable path forward requires both forces working together: XRP ETF inflows provide price support while ODL payment adoption embeds XRP into financial infrastructure. Neither speculation nor utility alone builds a durable asset—the convergence of both does.