Rumors swirled across X this week after an XRP analyst known as Steph flagged reports that senior executives from SWIFT and Ripple may have met privately for lunch in Miami. The posts suggested the two payments giants quietly discussed potential collaboration involving XRP — a claim neither company has confirmed. No official word from SWIFT or Ripple Neither SWIFT nor Ripple has acknowledged that a meeting took place or that any partnership talks are underway. Still, the rumor reignited a long-running debate in crypto and traditional finance about whether Ripple’s XRP Ledger could one day coexist with, or even complement, SWIFT’s global messaging network. Why the chatter matters Ripple has long pitched itself as a modernization layer for cross-border payments, directly challenging the market historically dominated by SWIFT. Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse has publicly set ambitious targets: at the 2025 XRPL Apex Conference he said the XRP Ledger could capture roughly 14% of the volume currently processed by SWIFT within five years. That kind of market-shift talk naturally invites speculation about cooperation or integration between the two. Social media has repeatedly circulated rumors of potential SWIFT–Ripple integrations and transitions to XRP-based liquidity over the years — none of which have resulted in formal announcements so far. Industry reaction The rumor also attracted high-profile attention outside the usual crypto circles. Entrepreneur Patrick Bet-David publicly said he’s buying XRP and pegged a $100 target to the possibility of SWIFT integration, illustrating how quickly unconfirmed reports can influence market sentiment. Could SWIFT and Ripple realistically work together? Technically, the idea isn’t implausible. SWIFT, founded in the 1970s, connects thousands of banks across more than 200 countries and territories and has decades of entrenched institutional support. Replacing or fully displacing that infrastructure would be enormous. Yet SWIFT itself has signaled openness to distributed ledger technology. In September 2025 the organization announced plans to add a blockchain-based shared ledger to its technology stack, suggesting it sees a role for DLT in the future of global finance. Meanwhile, Ripple has been expanding its institutional footprint through acquisitions and partnerships — including purchases of Hidden Road and GTreasury — and by onboarding regional banking partners across Asia, the Middle East and Europe. In theory, a hybrid model could emerge where SWIFT continues to handle standardized messaging while leveraging distributed ledgers like the XRP Ledger for faster settlement and liquidity. Bottom line For now, the Miami lunch remains an unverified rumor. But the conversation it sparked highlights a real and ongoing question in payments: whether legacy systems and crypto-native rails will compete, converge, or coexist. Any concrete collaboration between SWIFT and Ripple would have major implications for cross-border payments and XRP’s market narrative — which is why even unconfirmed whispers draw so much attention. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news
