The petrodollar arrangement that has underpinned global finance for decades is under more pressure than at any point in recent memory, and the Iran war is accelerating a shift that experts say began years earlier.
Gulf nations are openly questioning whether Washington’s security guarantees extend to them or exclusively to Israel. The UAE has left OPEC. And Iran is now reportedly charging tolls to pass through the Strait of Hormuz, demanding payment in cryptocurrency rather than dollars.
The Financial Times reported that Iran initially sought $2 million per vessel, with a more recent figure of $1 per barrel of oil, payable in the cryptocurrency equivalent. The specific token was not named. Analysts have noted it could be Bitcoin, Tether, or any number of assets including XRP.
Where XRP Enters the Conversation
The breakdown of dollar-denominated oil trade is forcing a fundamental question: what replaces SWIFT and correspondent banking in a multipolar world where nations no longer trust each other’s financial systems and cannot trust each other’s banks?
Analysts following the XRP ledger argue it is structurally positioned to answer that question. The ledger settles transactions in approximately three seconds at a fraction of a cent, eliminates the need for nostro and vostro accounts that tie up dormant capital in correspondent banking relationships, and operates as a neutral infrastructure that no single sovereign nation controls or can weaponise.
The comparison to how Russia was removed from SWIFT in response to the Ukraine conflict is not lost on BRICS nations watching the current situation. When a reserve currency can be used as a geopolitical weapon, nations holding that currency face existential financial risk. A neutral bridge asset that cannot be seized or sanctioned addresses that risk directly.
The CBDC Complication
Analysts note that XRP’s role in instant cross-border settlement also creates the technical conditions for central bank digital currencies to operate at scale. Programmable money that governments can target to specific populations and specific use cases is both a financial inclusion tool and, critics argue, a potential control mechanism depending on who is operating it.
The distinction analysts draw is between XRP itself, which cannot be seized or confiscated on the ledger, and stablecoins issued on top of the ledger, which remain subject to clawback features and issuer control. In a world moving toward programmable digital currencies, that distinction matters considerably to those thinking about long-term financial sovereignty.
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