Bank of America is expanding its global payments strategy, focusing on improving cross-border transactions. The move highlights the growing importance of efficient international money movement in modern finance. As one of the world’s largest financial institutions, Bank of America is frequently linked to Ripple and payment innovation.
An analyst known as SMQKE on X noted that Bank of America is preparing to launch a new cross-border payments service that incorporates SWIFT. Rather than replacing legacy systems outright, banks are increasingly adopting hybrid payment models that use both Ripple and SWIFT for global transactions. This dual-framework approach is practical because RippleNet can integrate into existing banking infrastructure just like a traditional payment system.
SMQKE argues that this partnership creates a pathway for XRP to access the bank’s extensive global payment network. Banks can maintain SWIFT connectivity for global reach while leveraging XRP through RippleNet as a source of on-demand liquidity. This hybrid model further strengthens the foundation for XRP integration into the bank’s core payment infrastructure.
Some skeptics claim that XRP is unstable for tokenization, but crypto analyst CharuSan disagrees. With institutional-grade compliance features, built-in security architecture, and deep liquidity, the XRP Ledger stands out as a suitable network for tokenization. Unlike Ethereum, where external smart contract codes like ERC-20 are needed, XRPL embeds tokenization directly into its core code. This eliminates custom smart contract code, which is often a source of vulnerabilities and cyberattacks.
According to CharuSan, embedding tokenization at the protocol level lets XRPL issue and transfer real-world assets like real estate, stocks, and bonds securely within seconds, without exposing institutions to smart contract risk.
Wall Street and institutional banks require strict Know Your Customer (KYC) and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) standards, including control over who holds tokenized assets. XRPL addresses this natively, allowing issuers to restrict access and freeze suspicious accounts when necessary. This ensures only authorized participants can receive tokens at the protocol level, making XRPL a strong candidate for institutional adoption.
As Bank of America expands its global payments strategy, the hybrid approach using both Ripple and SWIFT could set a precedent for other banks, potentially accelerating the adoption of blockchain-based settlement systems in the traditional financial sector.
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