Former SWIFT Exec Denies Rumors of XRP Integration With Global Payment Network

by Joseph Rees

Former SWIFT Exec Denies Rumors of XRP Integration With Global Payment Network

Fresh speculation about a partnership between SWIFT and Ripple swept across crypto social media this week, only to be shut down within hours by one of the people best positioned to know the truth. Tom Zschach, who spent six years as SWIFT’s Chief Innovation Officer before recently leaving the organization, definitively shut down persistent rumors that the global financial messaging network plans to integrate or support the Ripple-linked cryptocurrency XRP.

A Two-Word Rebuttal

Zschach pushed back against the fresh Ripple rumors with a two-word reply on X: “Not happening.” The brevity of the response carried weight precisely because of his background — he led SWIFT’s digital asset strategy, giving him firsthand knowledge of what the network was actually building. According to one report, the denial came on July 10, 2026, when Zschach publicly dismissed claims that the global bank messaging network would back or integrate XRP or the XRP Ledger.

The rumor itself originated from a handful of XRP-focused accounts. Several influencer accounts began claiming, without evidence, that SWIFT intended to support established public tokens such as XRP rather than developing its own proprietary token. A community figure identified as SMQKE shared excerpts from an alleged document claiming SWIFT had abandoned plans to create its own digital asset, though no such document was ever traced to an official SWIFT source. Zschach also took a jab at the credibility gap behind the claims, and according to one account, he jokingly asked Grok, the AI assistant developed by xAI, to clarify whether the messaging network actually uses XRP.

Former SWIFT Chief Innovation Officer Tom Zschach has shut down the rumors

Former SWIFT Chief Innovation Officer Tom Zschach has shut down the rumors

What SWIFT Is Actually Building

Away from the rumor mill, SWIFT’s real digital asset roadmap looks nothing like the XRP narrative. The organization has been developing a blockchain-based shared ledger aimed at connecting tokenized commercial bank deposits with cross-border settlement. Rather than relying on a bridge currency like XRP, participating banks send each other tokenized deposits — digital versions of the money they already hold — moving value across SWIFT’s ledger without a third coin in the middle.

The pilot phase is not small. SWIFT switched on its own blockchain system with 17 of the world’s biggest banks, and none of that activity involved XRP. Separately, one report noted that Swift officially confirmed its new blockchain-enabled ledger completed development after roughly nine months of testing and is now ready for commercial implementation, with the initial banking cohort including HSBC, Citi, UBS, MUFG, DBS and Wells Fargo. A first version capable of processing live transactions is targeted for later in 2026, according to reporting that cites SWIFT’s own design-stage completion announcement in March.

Swift's blockchain-based ledger is ready for use

Swift’s blockchain-based ledger is ready for use

Why the Rumors Persist

Part of the confusion stems from the fact that some banks in SWIFT’s pilot also maintain separate ties to Ripple. Two of the 17 participating banks, Standard Chartered and UBS, already work with Ripple, and Ripple Treasury joined SWIFT’s certified partner program earlier this year. That overlap has repeatedly been misread by parts of the XRP community as evidence of a deeper institutional tie-in, even though large banks routinely maintain relationships with multiple blockchain and payments vendors simultaneously.

Reporting also points to a recurring cycle behind these episodes. A SWIFT executive or technical document references tokenization or interoperability, XRP communities interpret it as implicit adoption, influencer accounts amplify the interpretation as fact, and a correction eventually follows. This is not the first time Zschach has intervened to correct the record — he has also argued that Ripple’s survival of its legal battle with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission should not be seen as proof of institutional strength, and he has previously compared Ripple’s technology to a fax machine in the internet era.

Ripple’s Shifting Strategy

Ripple’s own positioning has evolved over time, moving away from framing itself as a direct SWIFT replacement. XRP still functions as the bridge asset that moves value between currencies inside Ripple’s own rails, regardless of whether SWIFT builds a blockchain of its own, and the company continues to expand through custody services, regulated payment products and its RLUSD stablecoin. Separately, Ripple secured a full MiCA license in Luxembourg this week, a regulatory milestone unrelated to the SWIFT rumor but one that continued to circulate alongside it in crypto discourse. 

Market Reaction

Despite the denial, XRP saw only modest price movement, trading in a narrow band. The token traded near $1.09, with a market cap around $69 billion and daily trading volume topping $1 billion. Analysts covering the episode cautioned against conflating SWIFT’s genuine blockchain progress with unverified partnership claims, noting that Swift’s ledger is real, but the partnership isn’t.

Ripple (XRP) Price Performance on 11/7/2026 (Source: CoinMarketCap)

Ripple (XRP) Price Performance on 11/7/2026 (Source: CoinMarketCap)

For now, neither SWIFT’s shared ledger initiative nor its 17-bank pilot confirms any XRP integration, and Zschach’s intervention appears to have closed the door on this particular round of speculation — at least until the next SWIFT announcement reignites it.

The post Former SWIFT Exec Denies Rumors of XRP Integration With Global Payment Network appeared first on NFT Plazas.

Source: https://nftplazas.com/former-swift-exec-denies-xrp-integration-rumors/

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