Is Chainlink Going to Be the Next XRP?

Key Points

Apples and oranges can't be directly compared, yet the fact that they're both considered to be fruits means that at least a few comparisons are inevitable, even if they lack rigor.

At least in many conversations among investors on social media, that's what's going on with the cryptocurrencies XRP (CRYPTO: XRP) and Chainlink (CRYPTO: LINK) . The gist of the online chatter is that Chainlink could be the next XRP in terms of its growth potential, due to its supposedly superior positioning.

The comparison between these two coins is, much like talking about apples and oranges, quick to make -- but it isn't actually accurate. The right approach for investors isn't to think about picking a winner from two substitutes, but rather to understand how each asset earns its keep.

Let's unpack a few details about both cryptocurrencies, to get a clearer idea about whether one coin could actually supplant the other.

Is Chainlink Going to Be the Next XRP?

These coins have different niches

Chainlink aims to be crypto's data and messaging plumbing by providing data oracles to blockchains, but it isn't a blockchain itself.

In this case, you can think of data oracles as automated services that take information from the world outside of cryptocurrency, like stock or commodity prices, and then import it such that on-chain programs and smart contracts can use the data feeds for their own (also automated) purposes. This is why companies keep piloting with Chainlink -- for instance, to make mutual fund price data available in the blockchain world.

Because oracles are digital infrastructure, the right metric is how much value their data touches or "secures." On that front, Chainlink leads the oracle market by total value secured (TVS) with $57.9 billion. That's a 61.5% share of the market. It's a sign that many protocols and institutions already rely on Chainlink.

XRP is a very different beast, at least per the plans of its issuer, Ripple.

The XRP Ledger (XRPL) and Ripple's products aim to be financial plumbing for cross-border money movement by financial institutions. That includes using XRP as a bridge asset, and also increasingly using stablecoins, including the Ripple USD (CRYPTO: RLUSD) issued by Ripple, as the main payment rail on the network.

Ripple markets that entire service stack directly to institutional investors who want faster settlement times and lower working capital needs than what they're able to accomplish with legacy technology. The XRPL also bakes in compliance-friendly capital controls for asset issuers, including a few features that help institutions meet know-your-customer (KYC) and anti-money laundering (AML) obligations without the need to build any custom smart contracts.

OK