Vincent van Code posted a detailed thread today on May 12 about how the Clarity Act might help XRP. He argues that the Senate markup on Thursday, May 14, is the final legal API for global banks to move trillions from static Nostro accounts to the XRP Ledger. By converting Ripple’s 40+ billion escrow XRP into protocol-native liquidity pools (AMMs), we are witnessing a structural revaluation of XRP – from a speculative token to high-velocity collateral. Let’s break down his logic.
Vincent starts with a mechanical flip. For years, Ripple’s escrow was seen as a “sell pressure” bug. In a post-CLARITY world, it becomes a liquidity feature. The trigger: the CLARITY Act passes, giving banks legal safe harbor. Then Ripple deposits 5 to 10 billion XRP from escrow into pools like RLUSD/XRP, EURCV/XRP, and JPY/XRP.
The AMM works on the invariant x * y = k. By adding billions in bridge assets, the ledger creates a volatility floor. The system is already cabled up. Mastercard and Societe Generale (EURCV) are live on-chain. They are waiting for liquidity depth to handle production-scale volume. The big four institutional corridors are:
Now the math. To move 100 million in a single block with less than 0.1% slippage requires around $20 billion in total value locked. The AMM pathfinding algorithm will bid up the price of XRP until the pool reaches efficiency equilibrium. At current price ($1.47), the big four pools would require about 18 billion XRP – mathematically impossible and illiquid. At $10, the pools require only about 2.7 billion XRP – optimized and sustainable.
Vincent’s conclusion: the price does not hit $10 because of hype. It hits $10 because the TVL must scale to handle Mastercard and bank volume.
Related XRP news: Grok AI Predicts the Price of XRP if the Clarity Act Fails
Dan Gambardello shared the key points from the 309-page CLARITY Act draft released on May 12 for Thursday’s markup:
Vincent van Code’s argument is one of the more sophisticated XRP theses we have seen. It does not rely on retail hype or a simple “bank adoption” news. Instead, it uses AMM mechanics and TVL math. The core insight is correct: if CLARITY passes and banks legally enter the XRPL, liquidity pools will need to be deep. Ripple controls billions of XRP in escrow. Using that escrow to seed pools turns a former overhang into a structural bid.
The numbers make sense. At $1.47, you cannot get $20 billion TVL without stripping the market of nearly all circulating XRP. At $10, the required XRP drops to a manageable 2.7 billion. The AMM does not care about sentiment. It cares about the invariant. If volume comes, the algorithm bids price up until the pool reaches equilibrium.
That said, big assumptions remain. First, the CLARITY Act must pass on Thursday – and then clear the full Senate and House. Second, banks must actually use the XRPL, not just have permission. Third, Ripple must follow through on seeding pools with billions of escrow XRP. Each of these steps could fail or be delayed.
For traders, the risk-reward is clear. If CLARITY passes, XRP could reprice toward the $5–$10 range over months as liquidity builds. If it fails, XRP likely drops back to $1.00 or lower. The vote on May 14 is the first domino. Watch it closely.
If the bill clears the Senate Banking Committee this Thursday, XRP could immediately catapult through the 1.45-1.50 resistance toward 1.65-1.80. A full Senate passage by July 4, combined with billions in ETF inflows, would likely lift XRP into the 3-3-5 range by year-end. Longer term, the AMM pathfinding algorithm would bid up XRP’s price until the pools reach efficiency equilibrium; to settle 100M bank blocks with <0.1 10+**, purely from TVL scale requirements.
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The post XRP’s $10+ Math: How the CLARITY Act Turns Ripple’s 40B Escrow Into Protocol‑Native Liquidity Pools appeared first on CaptainAltcoin.

