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Core function of XRP and XLM: how two networks organize global payment architecture
Many often consider XRP and XLM as competitors, but Black Swan Capitalist Versan Aljarrah offers a different perspective. He argues that these two networks are not competing but rather serving different core functions within a single financial system. One focuses on large-scale institutional settlements, while the other aims to improve financial accessibility for millions of users. This view provides a deeper understanding of how blockchain technology can integrate into the existing global economy rather than completely replacing it.
XRP as the Core of the Institutional Layer
XRP was designed with a specific purpose: to provide speed and liquidity for large-scale cross-border transactions. The XRP Ledger processes transactions in seconds with minimal fees, making it an ideal solution for banks, payment providers, and financial institutions that move millions of dollars across borders daily.
Traditional international payments still rely on slow SWIFT systems, which require pre-funding accounts and leave capital locked up for days. XRP offers an alternative that reduces friction and accelerates settlements while remaining within a regulated environment suitable for financial institutions. That’s why discussions around XRP often revolve around liquidity corridors, settlement layers, and corporate adoption — these are core functions for the wholesale level of the economy.
XLM: The Core of Financial Inclusion
Stellar, on the other hand, targets a different end of the spectrum. XLM is aimed at those left outside traditional banking services. The Stellar network supports remittances for migrants, microtransactions for developed markets, tokenized assets for local communities, and simple wallets for users without IDs.
Speed and low cost still matter, but it is the concept of financial inclusion that defines the architecture of the network. Applications built on Stellar are often consumer-focused. They enable near-free small transfers, tokenize local assets, and provide financial services where traditional banks are absent. This core function is about everyday people’s transactions, not mega-corporations.
Interaction of Functions: A Two-Tier Architecture
Aljarrah’s statement places both assets within a single financial architecture. Modern global finance already operates on this principle. At the top level, large banks clear and settle through centralized systems. At the lower level, millions of retail users interact via mobile apps, payment systems, and local networks.
The global blockchain ecosystem requires both levels to function. XRP provides speed and reliability for the institutional layer, where large sums move. XLM handles distribution and accessibility at the user level, where simplicity and inclusion are key. This structural complementarity makes both networks mutually beneficial rather than redundant. Instead of competition, specialization emerges, increasing the likelihood that both systems can coexist, grow together, and jointly transform the global financial system.