A new stablecoin project backed by a broad group of payments and finance names has brought the XRP Ledger back into the conversation. Open USD, or OUSD, is governed by Open Standard and has been described as a stablecoin backed by a consortium involving more than 140 companies, including Visa, Mastercard, Stripe, BlackRock, Coinbase and Ripple.
TL;DR
- Open Standard announced Open USD, a new stablecoin governed by a consortium.
- The list of backers reportedly includes Visa, Mastercard, Stripe, BlackRock, Coinbase and Ripple.
- Former Ripple engineer Matt Hamilton compared parts of the design to the 2012 XRP Ledger architecture.
- The comparison is a technical comment, not proof that OUSD is minted on XRPL or built by Ripple.
The XRP angle is not that Ripple is exclusively building OUSD. That would be a bad read. The most interesting point is that former Ripple lead engineer Matt Hamilton argued that the project’s multilateral reserve sharing structure resembles ideas already present in the first design of the XRP Ledger.
What is OUSD – and what it is not
OUSD is positioned as a stablecoin governed by Open Standard, with the participation of a large consortium. Its early rollout is expected to involve Solana and Tempo first, rather than launching as a native XRP Ledger product. This distinction is important because XRP communities can sometimes move quickly from comparison to supposed integration.
In this case, the refined framing is technical. The discussion focuses on whether the conception of colonization and reservation sharing echoes concepts that XRPL proponents have discussed for years. This is not an official announcement that Ripple controls the product or that the stablecoin is issued directly on XRPL.
Why XRPL keeps popping up in stablecoin debates
The XRP Ledger was designed with rapid settlement and movement of assets in mind. Long before the current stablecoin boom, the XRPL architecture included features intended to support issued assets, payment methods, and multi-party settlement. This is why stablecoin designs often trigger comparisons from XRP developers and longtime supporters.
Hamilton’s view, as expressed in the validated transfer, is that the structure of OUSD resembles the ideas built into XRPL in 2012. For XRP holders, this is a reminder that the ledger design was at the start of several conversations that are now heading into mainstream finance.
The real signal for XRP readers
The market should avoid turning this into an integration story unless it is officially announced. But even for comparison, it counts. Stablecoins are becoming one of the most important pieces of global crypto infrastructure, and major payments companies are now actively exploring consortium models.
If these patterns resemble old XRPL design ideas, that gives XRP proponents a narrative boost. This suggests that some of the ledger’s early assumptions regarding settlement and issued value are being revisited by major financial players. The open question is whether this will ultimately result in direct use of XRPL, or whether the market will simply borrow design ideas without routing activity through the XRP Ledger itself.
For readers, the XRP angle is strongest when it remains accurate. Network activity, stablecoin settlement, and technical comparisons can all support the story of the ledger’s utility, but they should not be extended to claims that the source material does not directly support.
This report is based on information from the XRPL documentation.
This article was written by the News Desk and edited by Samuel Rae.
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