
Wrapped XRP (wXRP) is now live on Solana, issued by regulated custodian Hex Trust and bridged securely via LayerZero, backed 1:1 of XRP that lets users trade, provide liquidity, lend, and earn yield across Solana’s DeFi apps.
This is the latest piece of a multi-chain rollout that Hex Trust detailed back in December 2025, as the same wXRP infrastructure is already operating on Ethereum, Optimism, and HyperEVM, giving XRP holders regulated on-ramps into deeper liquidity pools wherever DeFi happens. RippleX SVP Markus Infanger, noted the move addresses growing demand to use XRP across the wider crypto ecosystem and it aligns with Ripple’s own RLUSD stablecoin work. LayerZero handles the bridging that has captured the majority of reliable cross-chain volume after earlier bridge exploits elsewhere.
Major Solana based players such as Ondo Finance which has expanded tokenized treasury and equity products onto the network, and Superstate whose leadership has publicly endorsed Solana as one of only two viable chains for RWAs work alongside Ethereum now operate in a way where they can integrate wXRP straight into liquidity pools lending markets and atomic settlement flows.
At the same time, big institutions like BlackRock and Franklin Templeton are building on Solana with their own tokenized market funds. BlackRock brought its BUIDL fund which holds cash and Treasuries to deliver dollar yields to Solana, giving qualified investors fast, low-cost access to on-chain returns. Franklin Templeton did the same with its on-chain US Government Money Market Fund. WisdomTree brought its tokenized funds covering money markets, stocks, bonds, alternatives, and balanced portfolios, VanEck launched its low-fee Treasury bill fund VBILL, Hamilton Lane added tokenized access to private infrastructure and secondary funds, and Apollo made its ACRED private credit product available as collateral in protocols like Morpho. This lets firms keep their traditional compliance and custody setups intact while plugging these assets straight into Solana, so institutions can easily use wXRP for liquidity, collateral, or quick settlements.
Solana has been scaling RWA activity with tokenized ecosystems on-chain surpassing two billion dollars in value and protocols like Kamino handling over one billion dollars in real world asset deposits across isolated lending markets, where institutions borrow against assets and earn yield from cash flows. Ripple has targeted these kinds of entities through its custody solutions and partnerships with banks, including BBVA, DBS Bank, DZ Bank, Intesa Sanpaolo, and more recently Kyobo Life Insurance, for on-chain settlement and staking capabilities that now extend naturally to Solana networks.
There’s support across Phantom wallet, Jupiter Exchange, Meteora, and Titan Exchange, ensures that the infrastructure is ready for immediate use, which removes one of the frictions that has kept payment assets like XRP siloed from builders who prefer Solana for its sub-cent fees and near instant finality.

Bitcoin surged to $71,200 on Monday as investors are optimisitc on de-escalation of the Iran conflict.
The move started when President Trump posted on Truth Social that he had instructed the Department of War to postpone planned strikes against Iranian power plants and energy infrastructure for five days, following what he called "very good and productive" talks with Tehran. Crypto jumped roughly 5% on the news. Ether climbed above $2,100, BNB pushed through $650, and XRP traded above $1.40. Oil plunged around 11%, S&P 500 futures gained nearly 4%, and global markets added an estimated $2.5 trillion in value within about 20 minutes.
Then Iran's state-affiliated Fars News Agency cited an unidentified source denying any talks had taken place. Gains started reversing almost immediately. Bitcoin is now up about 2.5% on the day and down roughly 5% on the week, sitting just under $71,000 after hitting an intraday high of $71,224 per CoinGecko data.
The session is the latest chapter in a conflict that has rattled crypto markets since Operation Epic Fury launched on February 28, when the U.S. and Israel struck targets across Iran and killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Iran's subsequent blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, a critical chokepoint for global oil flows, has kept energy prices elevated and risk appetite suppressed. The Federal Reserve, meeting earlier this month against that backdrop, revised its 2026 inflation forecast upward to 2.7% and signaled a higher-for-longer stance on rates.
Despite the chaos, Bitcoin has held above its pre-war price level, a fact that has not gone unnoticed. When the strikes began on a Saturday morning and every traditional market was closed, crypto was the only liquid venue available for investors to respond. That 24/7 trading reality, once seen as a volatility risk, has started looking more like a feature.
The five-day pause, if it holds at all, does not end the conflict. Iran continues to strike targets across the Gulf, and Israel would need to sign on to any broader ceasefire. Israel has publicly said it has thousands of remaining targets and requires at least three more weeks of operations. Prediction markets currently favor a ceasefire by late April at the earliest.
Bitcoin's 30-day implied volatility index has bounced to 60%, and $791 million in total leveraged positions have been wiped across crypto markets this session according to CoinGlass, with $425 million of those being longs. The clock on Trump's five-day window is ticking, and so is the market's patience.

Ripple is pushing further into decentralized markets.
The company said it will support Hyperliquid through Ripple Prime, its institutional brokerage platform, giving professional trading firms access to on-chain derivatives without having to interact directly with DeFi infrastructure.
For Ripple, the move is about meeting institutional demand where it already exists. Many hedge funds and asset managers want exposure to decentralized markets, but they still operate inside traditional risk, margin, and reporting systems. Ripple Prime is designed to sit between those worlds.
With Hyperliquid now supported, Ripple Prime clients can trade decentralized perpetual futures while managing exposure alongside more familiar products like FX and cleared derivatives.
The biggest shift here is not access, but structure.
Instead of setting up wallets, managing smart contracts, or splitting capital across multiple venues, institutions can route trades through Ripple Prime and maintain a single counterparty relationship. Margin, collateral, and reporting remain centralized, even though execution happens onchain.
That matters for firms that are comfortable trading derivatives but not interested in rebuilding their internal processes for DeFi. It also reduces capital inefficiencies that come from isolating on-chain positions from the rest of a trading book.
This is not retail access. It is aimed squarely at professional desks.
Hyperliquid has become one of the more active decentralized derivatives platforms in crypto, largely because it does not feel like most DeFi exchanges.
It runs an on-chain order book instead of an automated market maker, which allows for tighter spreads and execution that better suits high-volume traders. Perpetual futures on major assets make up most of the activity, with new markets continuing to roll out.
That combination has drawn liquidity, which is still the hardest thing to build in decentralized markets. For institutions, liquidity tends to matter more than ideology.
Ripple’s support puts Hyperliquid in front of firms that may not have considered trading on a decentralized venue before.
This announcement fits into a wider trend across crypto infrastructure.
Firms that serve institutions are no longer treating DeFi as a separate category. Instead, they are trying to make it another venue, similar to how traditional desks access exchanges, clearing houses, or OTC markets.
Ripple’s approach reflects that thinking. The company is not asking institutions to learn DeFi. It is packaging DeFi in a way that looks familiar enough to be usable.
That model is starting to show up more often, especially as tokenized assets and on-chain credit products gain traction.
For XRP, deeper on-chain liquidity and derivatives access matter.
Derivatives tend to pull in more sophisticated traders, which can tighten spreads and improve price discovery over time. Connecting XRP-related markets to high-performance decentralized venues adds another layer to its institutional story.
It also shows how fragmented crypto markets are slowly being stitched together, with execution happening in one place and risk managed somewhere else.
Decentralized derivatives come with obvious risks.
Leverage, liquidations, and volatility can move fast, and regulatory attention around perpetual futures is not going away. Even with a prime brokerage layer in front, institutions are still exposed to market dynamics that can get messy.
Ripple’s platform can simplify access and controls, but it does not remove those risks.
Ripple’s Hyperliquid support is not a flashy consumer announcement. It is infrastructure work.
It points to a future where on-chain markets are accessed the same way institutions already access everything else, through familiar systems, familiar counterparties, and familiar controls.
Whether that future scales depends on liquidity, regulation, and market demand. But for now, Ripple is clearly positioning itself to be part of that next phase.
