Fully Functional Ripple Stablecoin Won’t Launch This Year: Expert
Source: Bitcoinist
The XRP community is currently abuzz with speculation regarding the imminent release of the Ripple stablecoin, RLUSD. Contrary to widespread rumors, Vet (@Vet_X0), a recognized XRPL dUNL validator and co-founder of the leading NFT marketplace on the XRP Ledger “xrp.cafe,” has clarified that the RLUSD will not be fully functional on the XRPL this year.
Why The Ripple Stablecoin Will Not Be Fully Operational This Year
In a detailed post on X, Vet explains the technical constraints: “Expectation management! RLUSD will either only launch on ETH this year, or they launch also on the XRPL but without the ability to be used in the AMM on the XRP Ledger initially, but with the DEX orderbook. I expect, or rather hope, for the latter.”
Vet further elaborated on the reasons, pointing to the ‘clawback’ feature enabled on RLUSD, which the XRP Ledger currently does not support in its Automated Market Maker (AMM). “RLUSD is a stablecoin with clawback settings enabled. Tokens with this setting are denied by the XRP Ledger to be used in the AMM. There are amendments in the works to help solving this,” Vet added.
The key amendments cited by Vet include XLS-73 AMM Clawback and XLS-77, which are designed to enhance control over trustlines and restrict the transferability of RLUSD under certain conditions. XLS-73 aims to modify the AMM system to accommodate assets with clawback features, while XLS-77 is intended to allow for a more comprehensive freeze of Trustlines further securing the network against misuse by blacklisted accounts.
“In other words, because the XRPL is decentralized these amendments are impossible to predict when they will come, especially given the fatigue I observed. I love seeing people be excited about things happening on chain via the tracker I made, educating themselves on trustlines and IOUs on the XRPL is exactly where I want attention to go to, as opposed to screenshots of articles, partnerships and secret committee hot air talk,” Vet concluded.
Notably, Ripple Chief Technology Officer (CTO) David “JoelKatz” Schwartz did not dispute Vet’s overall assessment but did provide a clarification on a specific technical point in Vet’s explanation. In a commentary on X, Schwartz noted: “FWIW, I’m not sure I like the description of XLS-77 as a ‘deeper’ freeze. If anything, it’s less deep. Unless I’m missing something, in any case where XLS-77 makes a difference, an asset that would have been frozen is, instead, not frozen.”
Vet responded to Schwartz’s critique by refining his terminology, acknowledging the complexity of the terms and their implications across the XRPL infrastructure: “Good point…hmmm…in my mind it made sense because the freeze goes beyond the trustline, it includes the payment engine and dex – maybe that’s why ‘deep.’”
Daniel Keller, another well-known figure within the XRP community, sought further clarification if the core statement about the Ripple stablecoin is pure speculation or a fact. Vet confirmed the technical barriers: “Confirmed by the XRP Ledger that it’s not possible. Unconfirmed what way they will go, only ETH or ETH and XRPL but with the AMM restrictions.”
At press time, XRP traded at $0.6344.
Featured image created with DALL.E, chart from TradingView.com