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XRP Does Not Need $28 Trillion to Hit $100: The Market Cap Multiplier Explained

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$XRP is trading around $1.09 and sitting roughly 70% below its all-time high, but the math behind a potential $100 $XRP price target is more straightforward than most people realise, and it has already been demonstrated by assets with remarkably similar properties. That is the main argument Zach Rector, an $XRP analyst, laid out in a detailed breakdown.

The Comparable Assets

The starting point is simple. Critics who call $100 $XRP impossible are asked one question: based on what? NVIDIA has already reached a $5 trillion market cap. Gold has reached $28 trillion. The U.S. dollar M2 money supply sits at $23 trillion. The precedent for assets reaching those valuations exists. The question is whether $XRP has the properties to get there.

Rector argues it does. $XRP shares the key characteristics of gold, including scarcity, fungibility, divisibility, durability and global accessibility, but adds something gold cannot offer: a functioning payment network.

You cannot build a tokenisation platform on gold. You cannot do decentralised lending and borrowing with gold. You cannot settle trillions of dollars in cross-border transactions daily using gold. $XRP can do all of those things, which in Rector’s view gives it a utility ceiling that gold cannot match.

The Price Targets by Comparison

At a conservative 100 billion $XRP circulating supply, reaching NVIDIA’s market cap produces a $50 $XRP price. Matching the Japanese yen’s $8 trillion equivalent produces $80. Reaching the U.S. dollar M2 supply of $23 trillion produces $231. And matching gold’s current $28 trillion market cap produces $281 per $XRP token.

Using the current circulating supply of approximately 62 billion coins rather than the conservative 100 billion figure, those numbers rise significantly, with the gold comparison pushing toward $452 per token.

The Market Cap Multiplier

The most compelling part of Rector’s analysis is not the price targets but the mechanism that makes them achievable without requiring trillions of dollars to flow directly into $XRP.

The market cap multiplier measures how much the total market cap changes relative to the actual net inflow of capital. In November 2025, $XRP lost $41 billion in market cap from only $808 million in net outflows, a 50x multiplier. During an eight-hour period in April 2025, $XRP’s market cap grew by $7.74 billion from just $12.87 million in net inflows, a 601x multiplier.

What this means in practical terms is that $XRP does not need $28 trillion in new money to reach gold’s market cap. At a conservative 50x multiplier, it would need approximately $198 billion in net inflows to reach a $10 trillion market cap and a $100 price. At a 100x multiplier, that drops to $99 billion. At 200x, less than $50 billion.

For context, Bitcoin ETFs alone attracted billions in inflows during their launch period. The numbers required are significant but not extraordinary by the standards of how global capital moves.

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