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XRP (Ripple) and Ethereum Now Share This 1 Absolutely Critical Resource. Here’s Why That’s Bullish For XRP

  • XRP just launched a new sidechain.

  • That sidechain can run smart contracts programmed for Ethereum.

  • It’s thus a way to potentially port a lot of talent from Ethereum to XRP.

  • 10 stocks we like better than XRP ›

XRP (CRYPTO: XRP) and Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH) have always been very different beasts. One is a payments chain with compliance baked into its DNA; the other is the original smart contract workhorse. Yet in late June, XRP gained access to a pool of one of Ethereum’s most valuable resources — its large population of developers.

Let’s explore why that crossover could send XRP’s long-term growth prospects into overdrive.

A pile of coins embossed with the Ethereum logo.
Image source: Getty Images.

For years, one key issue was that any developer who wanted to make smart contracts or decentralized apps (dApps) on XRP’s chain would need to learn a different technology stack.

But, with the latest update to the XRP Ledger (XRPL), Ripple, the company that issues XRP, answered this issue with the launch of its Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) sidechain. It went live on the mainnet on June 30, delivering full Ethereum-compatible smart contract support to the XRP universe.

Out of the box, the sidechain lets coders deploy smart contracts on XRP with the same toolkit they use on Ethereum. That means that porting an existing decentralized exchange (DEX) or lending protocol to XRP is almost a copy-and-paste job. In such a situation, XRP itself serves as the native gas token to pay user fees, while a bridge protocol ferries assets between the sidechain and XRPL’s main net, so the existing liquidity on the chain stays reachable.

This solution is ingenious because it preserves XRPL’s ultra-cheap, near-instant payment rails and compliance features, while insulating the core network from the heavier computation and potential exploits that come with generalized smart contracts. It also makes siphoning skilled smart contract developers from Ethereum extremely easy. So getting at least some of them to contribute to the XRP ecosystem instead of Ethereum is practically a given, especially if more capital is made available for their purposes.

Still, no rose is without thorns.

Bridges remain a favorite attack vector for hackers, and fragmenting liquidity across a sidechain can dull network effects if users refuse to hop over or if the friction of transiting capital from the main net to the sidechain or vice versa is too burdensome.

The beneficial effect of XRP gaining access to Ethereum’s developer community is hard to overstate. This is an enabler for XRP’s ecosystem to grow over time, sending the chain’s value skyward along the way.

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