The Federal Reserve has proposed a FedNow rule change that would let banks use intermediaries for some cross-border transfers. In plain English, that would give banks a native way to handle part of the payment flow that XRP supporters often cite as the token's core utility.
FedNow currently works only when a transfer involves two U.S. banks, which is why the service is domestic today. In its April 8 proposal, the Federal Reserve said it wants to let participants use intermediaries other than Reserve Banks.
What the Fed wants to change
The Board said the amendment could support private-sector cross-border payment solutions by letting a bank use an intermediary, such as a correspondent bank, for the international leg while using FedNow for the U.S. domestic leg. Because the proposal keeps part of the workflow inside existing bank infrastructure, it reads more like an upgrade to bank plumbing than a move toward a separate crypto rail. The notice is listed as 91 FR 18330 under document number 2026-06996, and comments are due by June 9, 2026.
Why that overlaps with XRP's pitch
Ripple's cross-border payments page says the company is focused on real-time settlement for international money movement. Ripple also argues that bank-run real-time payment systems are useful locally but do not solve the full global reach problem.
"Regional RTP systems have use cases locally, but they lack the global reach of a blockchain-based payment system."
Ripple
That quote is why the FedNow proposal matters to XRP holders. If banks can use an intermediary for the international segment and keep the U.S. segment inside FedNow, the overlap with Ripple's sales pitch becomes functional, even though the Fed never says it is targeting XRP.
$1.35 was the rough XRP price during the research window, which gives the competitive framing a live market anchor while the rule is still only a proposal.
A single crypto news alert framed the proposal as direct competition for XRP, but the official Federal Reserve materials do not mention XRP, Ripple, or any crypto network. The overlap is an inference drawn from the Fed's stated cross-border design, not an official claim about replacing crypto rails.
XRP's market capitalization sat near $82.68B during the same period, which shows how much investor value is still attached to the idea that crypto can improve institutional payments.
What regular holders should watch next
The crypto Fear & Greed Index stood at 12, or Extreme Fear, during the research window. In that kind of risk-off mood, a Fed-backed payment option can put extra pressure on the narrative that banks need a token-based rail just to move money faster.
That does not erase every XRP use case. Cross-border corridors outside the U.S. banking system are still different from a FedNow transfer that only covers the American leg. For newcomers, the practical takeaway is that this proposal is about competition inside bank infrastructure, not a direct ban on crypto payments.
It also fits a wider trend in which regulated finance keeps meeting crypto through new channels, from Ondo's request for SEC relief on tokenized securities to Bitmine's move to build a treasury of 71,524 ETH. At the same time, episodes like the Hyperbridge exploit that minted 1B fake DOT on Ethereum show why some banks may still prefer a central-bank-run network with fewer blockchain-specific risks.
The next concrete checkpoint is June 9, 2026. If the Fed receives strong support by then, XRP's payments narrative may need to focus less on speed alone and more on the parts of cross-border settlement that FedNow still cannot cover.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.