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By Lewis Jackson
A lot of people looking at my recent research have asked the same question: “Surely Ripple already understands all of this. So what does that mean for XRP?” That question is completely valid — and it turns out it’s the right question to ask. This research breaks down why XRP is unlikely to be the internal settlement asset of CBDC shared ledgers or unified bank platforms, and why that doesn’t mean XRP is irrelevant. Instead, it explains where XRP realistically fits in the system banks are actually building: at the seams, where different rulebooks, platforms, and networks still need to connect. Using liquidity math, system design, and real-world settlement mechanics, this piece explains: why most value settles inside venues, not through bridges why XRP’s role is narrower but more precise than most narratives suggest how velocity (refresh interval) determines whether XRP creates scarcity or just throughput and why Ripple’s strategy makes more sense once you stop assuming XRP must be “the core of everything” This isn’t a bullish or bearish take — it’s a structural one.
If you want to understand XRP beyond hype and price targets, this is the question you need to grapple with.

New XRP-Focused Research Defining the “Velocity Threshold” for Global Settlement and Liquidity

A lot of people looking at my recent research have asked the same question: “Surely Ripple already understands all of this. So what does that mean for XRP?” That question is completely valid — and it turns out it’s the right question to ask. This research breaks down why XRP is unlikely to be the internal settlement asset of CBDC shared ledgers or unified bank platforms, and why that doesn’t mean XRP is irrelevant. Instead, it explains where XRP realistically fits in the system banks are actually building: at the seams, where different rulebooks, platforms, and networks still need to connect. Using liquidity math, system design, and real-world settlement mechanics, this piece explains: why most value settles inside venues, not through bridges why XRP’s role is narrower but more precise than most narratives suggest how velocity (refresh interval) determines whether XRP creates scarcity or just throughput and why Ripple’s strategy makes more sense once you stop assuming XRP must be “the core of everything” This isn’t a bullish or bearish take — it’s a structural one. If you want to understand XRP beyond hype and price targets, this is the question you need to grapple with.
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Lewis Jackson Ventures announces the release of the Jackson Liquidity Framework — the first quantitative, regulator-aligned model for liquidity sizing in AMM-based settlement systems, CBDC corridors, and tokenised financial infrastructures. Developed using advanced stochastic simulations and grounded in Basel III and PFMI principles, the framework provides a missing methodology for determining how much liquidity prefunded AMM pools actually require under real-world flow conditions.

The Jackson Liquidity Framework - Announcement

Lewis Jackson Ventures announces the release of the Jackson Liquidity Framework — the first quantitative, regulator-aligned model for liquidity sizing in AMM-based settlement systems, CBDC corridors, and tokenised financial infrastructures. Developed using advanced stochastic simulations and grounded in Basel III and PFMI principles, the framework provides a missing methodology for determining how much liquidity prefunded AMM pools actually require under real-world flow conditions.
Read Now
In the first Macro Documentary, Lewis Jackson breaks down why crypto behaves unlike any asset class in modern finance — and why most investors are playing the game with the wrong mental model. Using real mathematics, network theory, and complex-systems research, Jackson explains why outliers dominate crypto returns, why crashes cascade violently, and how a small number of “network hubs” end up shaping the entire ecosystem. This research report converts that documentary into a clear, structured explanation — and shows how investors can position themselves in a market governed by power laws, preferential attachment, and criticality.

Crypto Doesn’t Follow the Rules — Inside Lewis Jackson’s Most Important Framework Yet

In the first Macro Documentary, Lewis Jackson breaks down why crypto behaves unlike any asset class in modern finance — and why most investors are playing the game with the wrong mental model. Using real mathematics, network theory, and complex-systems research, Jackson explains why outliers dominate crypto returns, why crashes cascade violently, and how a small number of “network hubs” end up shaping the entire ecosystem. This research report converts that documentary into a clear, structured explanation — and shows how investors can position themselves in a market governed by power laws, preferential attachment, and criticality.
Read Now
Crypto Research
Aave vs Compound: What the Difference Actually Means
Aave and Compound share the same core mechanism — overcollateralized borrowing with algorithmic rates. Here's where they've diverged, what drove the split, and why the architectural difference matters.
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Crypto Research
Uniswap vs SushiSwap: What's Actually Different?
SushiSwap launched in 2020 as a direct fork of Uniswap. Both are live AMM-based DEXes today, but they've diverged significantly in architecture, governance, and fee structure. Here's what actually differs.
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Crypto Research
Coinbase vs Binance: What the Difference Actually Means
Coinbase and Binance made opposite strategic bets: one chose regulatory compliance first, the other chose global scale. Here's how those choices shape custody risk, token access, and where each stands today.
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Crypto Research
Coinbase vs Binance: What's Actually Different?
Both are crypto exchanges, but their regulatory structures, legal histories, and product availability are fundamentally different. Here's what the distinction actually means for users.
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Crypto Research
MetaMask vs Trust Wallet: What's Actually Different?
MetaMask and Trust Wallet are both non-custodial wallets — but they were built for different ecosystems. MetaMask is EVM-first with browser extension integration; Trust Wallet is multi-chain from day one, mobile-first. Here's what that means in practice.
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Crypto Research
Ledger vs Trezor: What's Actually Different?
Ledger and Trezor both keep your private keys offline, but they differ on security chip architecture, open-source stance, and incident history. Here's what those differences actually mean.
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Crypto Research
Polygon vs Arbitrum: What the Difference Actually Means
Polygon and Arbitrum are both called Ethereum scaling solutions, but they operate on fundamentally different security models. One inherits Ethereum's security; the other maintains its own. Here's what that actually means.
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Crypto Research
Base vs Arbitrum: What the Difference Actually Means
Both Base and Arbitrum are optimistic rollups on Ethereum, but they're built on different stacks, governed differently, and exist for different reasons. Here's the architectural breakdown.
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Crypto Research
Arbitrum vs Optimism: What the Difference Actually Means
Arbitrum and Optimism are both optimistic rollups on Ethereum, but they diverge on fraud proof design, VM architecture, and ecosystem strategy. Here's what the distinction actually means.
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Crypto Research
Ethereum vs BNB Chain: What's Actually Different?
Ethereum and BNB Chain share EVM compatibility but use fundamentally different security models. BNB Smart Chain runs 21 validators under Proof of Staked Authority; Ethereum has over 1,000,000. This post maps the architectural and governance differences that actually matter.
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Crypto Research
Bitcoin vs Gold: How the Store-of-Value Case Actually Works
Bitcoin and gold are both called stores of value, but the mechanisms are completely different. Here's how each actually works — and what would change the picture.
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Crypto Research
NFTs vs Fungible Tokens: What the Difference Actually Means
NFTs and fungible tokens are architecturally distinct — not just by market category. The ERC-20 ledger tracks balances; ERC-721 tracks ownership of specific token IDs. This post explains what that difference actually means, including what NFT ownership does and doesn't confer on-chain.
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