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    MarketForces Africa » MarketForces News » XRP Target Price Up as Ripple Enables Crypto to Naira Payout

    XRP Target Price Up as Ripple Enables Crypto to Naira Payout

    Olu AnisereBy Olu AnisereMarch 26, 2026Updated:March 26, 2026 News No Comments4 Mins Read
    XRP Target Price Up as Ripple Enables Crypto to Naira Payout
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    XRP Target Price Up as Ripple Enables Crypto to Naira Payout

    A slew of cryptocurrency analysts has projected XRP to rise as Ripple expands its cross-border payment capabilities with crypto-to-naira payout, as Nigeria remains a strategic corridor for its operation.

    Ripple’s push into crypto-to-naira payouts aligns with its broader strategy of leveraging the XRP Ledger and stablecoins to address real cross-border payment frictions in high-adoption markets like Nigeria.

    “If licensed partners, asset choices, and Nigerian regulation line up, this corridor could become an important institutional payments route”.

    Reflecting the positive development, crypto analysts have set a new target price for XRP, which now ranges between $1.50 and $1.62, despite a series of falls that failed to breach the $1.60 price resistance.

    Trading data showed that XRP is down 3.53% to $1.36 over the past 24h, closely tracking the broader market sell-off. The move is primarily driven by macro-driven risk aversion, with a secondary drag from a sharp decline in its network’s on-chain activity.

    The broader crypto market downturn was triggered by rising oil prices and geopolitical tensions, prompting a risk-off flow that saw XRP move in lockstep with Bitcoin.

    Traders highlighted that a significant drop in XRP Ledger activity, with payments and active accounts down roughly 80% from prior peaks, undermines the network utility narrative.

    If XRP holds above the critical $1.38 support, it could consolidate toward $1.45; a break below risks a move toward $1.34–$1.30. The key immediate catalyst is the SEC’s decision on spot XRP ETF applications, expected imminently.

    The entire crypto market cap fell 2.73% in 24h, driven by rising oil prices above $100 and renewed U.S.-Iran geopolitical tensions. This sparked a risk-off sentiment, pulling Bitcoin down 2.74%. XRP, with a high beta to Bitcoin, mirrored this move almost exactly.

    XRP’s drop was not coin-specific but part of a broad deleveraging and de-risking event across digital assets. Stability in Bitcoin above $69,000 and any de-escalation in Middle East headlines, which could relieve pressure on altcoins.

    Ripple is expanding its cross-border payments stack so senders can fund in crypto while recipients in Nigeria receive naira on local rails.

    Ripple has been actively building payment corridors into high-adoption markets like Nigeria, and a crypto-to-naira payout feature fits this strategy, though public technical details remain sparse.

    Crypto-to-naira rails mainly target remittances, freelancers, and SMEs that struggle with slow or expensive USD–NGN transfers in Nigeria’s volatile FX environment.

    The key things to watch are which assets are supported (XRP or stablecoins), the local payout partners, fees, and how Nigerian regulation shapes limits and onboarding.

    Ripple’s core business is cross-border settlements, and it has been emphasising Sub-Saharan Africa as a high-utility region, with Nigeria alone accounting for about 92 billion dollars of on-chain volume in a recent 12 month period.

    In that context, a “crypto to naira payout” setup usually means a sender or institution funds a transfer in a digital asset (for example, XRP or a stablecoin) and a licensed Nigerian partner handles cash out to NGN bank accounts or mobile wallets.

    Recent updates show Ripple pushing a broader stablecoin and payment stack, including a Ripple Payments platform live in more than 60 markets and partnerships to expand digital settlement infrastructure, which makes the addition of a naira corridor technically and commercially consistent with its roadmap.

    This is not about a retail XRP trading app, but about plumbing that lets businesses move value in crypto while end users in Nigeria see naira in familiar local rails.

    Nigeria is one of the fastest-growing crypto markets globally, with a large, young population, high remittance flows, and persistent FX frictions that make dollar or euro transfers costly and slow.

    Ripple executives have highlighted Africa, and Nigeria specifically, as a region where crypto is used for real-world payments rather than speculation, citing strong growth in on-chain volumes and institutional interest.

    A reliable crypto-to-naira payout rail can reduce settlement times from days to minutes and potentially compress fees versus traditional correspondent banking, which is attractive for global employers, exporters, and remittance providers.

    If the corridor gains depth and regulatory clarity, payment volumes could grow quickly because it directly addresses real frictions that Nigerian users already face.

    Ripple is investing heavily in both XRP and its RLUSD stablecoin for settlement, so naira payouts could be funded by XRP, RLUSD, or a mix, depending on the partner’s preference.

    Nigeria has repeatedly adjusted its stance toward crypto and FX, so future central bank rules on stablecoins, exchanges, and on/off-ramps will influence limits, fees, and corridor reliability.

    Traders and crypto analysts said the market will treat crypto-to-naira payouts as a promising but policy-sensitive payments rail, and focus on whether volumes, supported assets, and regulatory signals trend in a consistently positive direction. XRP Dips, Digital Commodity Asset Trading Volume Surges

    Crypto to naira Ripple XRP
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    Olu Anisere
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    Olu Anisere is a financial and economic journalist at MarketForces Africa, specialising in African macroeconomic policy, international finance, energy markets, and continental development.He covers major multilateral institutions, including the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank, and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), providing readers with frontline reporting on policies shaping Africa's economic trajectory.Olu has reported extensively on Nigeria's fiscal and monetary policy landscape, including CBN interest rate decisions, Nigeria's bond market, FX inflows, and the country's engagement with global financial institutions.His coverage spans IMF and World Bank Spring and Annual Meetings, African Ministers of Finance conferences, and high-level economic forums where Africa's development agenda is set.His reporting captures perspectives from Africa's most influential economic voices, including Tony Elumelu, senior IMF officials, and CBN leadership, bringing institutional insight and policy depth to MarketForces Africa's readers.Olu also covers Inside Africa — tracking economic, investment, and development stories from across the continent. Olu Anisere is based in Lagos, Nigeria.

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