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Deutsche Bank Turns To Ripple Infrastructure As SWIFT Races To Build Blockchain Ledger

Deutsche Bank Turns To Ripple Infrastructure As SWIFT Races To Build Blockchain Ledger

Deutsche Bank is deepening its use of Ripple (XRP) payment infrastructure across cross-border settlements, foreign exchange operations, and digital asset custody, according to a report from German financial outlet Der Aktionär.

The bank is simultaneously serving as a lead architect of SWIFT's new blockchain-based payments ledger, a separate initiative involving more than 40 major institutions.

Neither Deutsche Bank nor Ripple issued official press statements to confirm the scope or terms of the arrangement.

The reporting is based on Der Aktionär's analysis of the bank's publicly observable moves within the Ripple ecosystem.

What Happened

Deutsche Bank has been partnering with Ripple-linked service providers to modernize its FX operations and multi-currency accounts, bypassing the correspondent banking chains that typically slow international transfers to two to five business days.

SWIFT confirmed Deutsche Bank as a key contributor to its blockchain-based global payments ledger, describing it as part of a coalition of banks "building the rails of the future to enable interoperability and support real-time, always-on cross-border payments."

JPMorgan is also listed among participants in the same project.

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Why It Matters

The dual involvement - Ripple infrastructure internally, SWIFT blockchain externally - puts Deutsche Bank in an unusual position. It is effectively helping build what SWIFT frames as a rival to the legacy correspondent banking model, while simultaneously using Ripple's own settlement rails.

Industry estimates cited in the reporting suggest distributed ledger technology could reduce operational costs in global payments by up to 30%, though that figure refers broadly to DLT adoption rather than Deutsche Bank's specific implementation.

For XRP, the token that powers Ripple's on-demand liquidity service, the practical implications remain unclear. Banks can and do use Ripple's payment network without holding or transacting in XRP. Deutsche Bank has not disclosed whether its integration includes XRP-based liquidity or is limited to Ripple's messaging and settlement software.

XRP traded around $1.42 at the time of writing, down roughly 4.5% on the day, reflecting broader cryptocurrency market weakness rather than any reaction to the Deutsche Bank news.

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