XRP (XRP) is hovering around the $2 mark, but there's an awkward question gaining traction: is this thing wildly overvalued?
The Numbers Don't Add Up
Content creator DBCrypto sparked fresh debate by pointing out a jarring mismatch. XRP's market valuation sits above $127 billion, yet the XRP Ledger burned only about 700 XRP in fees per day this week. That's less than $1,600 in daily economic activity for a network supposedly securing massive value.
And it's not a fluke. Over the past three months, XRP has never topped $5,000 in daily fees and routinely brings in under $2,000. Data from DefiLlama paints an even bleaker picture: all XRP Ledger apps combined generated just $149 to $303 in revenue over a 24-hour stretch.
Critics like DBCrypto are now openly questioning whether XRP's fundamentals support its price tag, or if the valuation is artificially propped up.
Design Feature, Not Bug
Here's the twist: XRP's minimal revenue isn't a sign of network failure. The blockchain was intentionally designed with microscopic fees, often fractions of a cent, that get burned instead of flowing to validators. Unlike Bitcoin, where miners collect substantial block rewards and transaction fees, XRP's architecture simply doesn't generate meaningful protocol revenue.
That keeps transactions dirt cheap, which is great for users. But it also fuels the ongoing debate about whether a network producing so little economic value can justify a nine-figure market cap.
Awkward Timing
The scrutiny arrives at a delicate moment. The Bitwise XRP ETF started trading on the NYSE today, offering investors direct spot exposure. But just before launch, analyst Ali Martinez reported that whales offloaded 190 million XRP over the past 48 hours, adding fresh uncertainty to the token's near-term outlook.