🚨 #XRP WILL BE GOLD‑BACKED AND PRICED AT $2,953.62 BY Q1 2026! 🚀🔥
A $10,000 – $35,000 XRP price range is now a REAL possibility! The financial shift is happening. Are you ready? 👀💰 pic.twitter.com/B7mlHNZUHE
— 𝐃𝐎𝐌𝐈𝐍𝐔𝐒 ⚡ XRP Syndicate (@BaronDominus) September 26, 2025
XRP Cannot Be Gold‑Backed
Hamilton intervened to challenge the statement head‑on. Responding to the claim on X, he wrote that XRP cannot be backed by gold, stressing that this limitation stems from the token’s design. Unlike currencies or tokens that can be issued or redeemed in relation to reserves, XRP’s supply is permanently capped at 100 billion units.
This fixed supply means there is no mechanism to expand or contract XRP circulation in response to fluctuations in gold reserves. As a result, it’s not feasible to peg XRP to gold or any other physical asset. Hamilton’s comments provided a practical counter to speculative narratives that frequently arise within the community.
Why Gold‑Backing Conflicts With XRP’s Structure
The reasoning rests on XRP’s immutable supply rules. Unlike fiat money, which can be printed to reflect changing reserves in a gold‑backed system, XRP cannot be created or destroyed beyond what is already programmed. This restriction removes the flexibility required for any token designed to represent or be exchanged for physical gold.
Hamilton also emphasized that XRP’s value doesn’t rely on being tied to an external asset such as gold. Instead, its worth is determined by adoption, real‑world utility, liquidity, and market demand. For him, efforts to link XRP to gold overlook the fundamentals that drive its existing use cases.
The Role of Gold‑Backed Tokens in Crypto
Although Hamilton rejected the concept for XRP, gold‑backed cryptocurrencies do exist in the digital asset space, usually structured as stablecoins. These tokens are pegged to physical gold reserves and aim to offer stability similar to traditional gold investments.
One example is Tether’s XAUT, introduced as part of the company’s broader strategy to diversify reserves. Each XAUT token is tied to a specific quantity of gold stored in Swiss vaults, making it redeemable for the physical asset. As of 2025, Tether’s gold reserves total approximately 80 metric tons, valued at around $8 billion, which accounts for about 5 % of its overall reserves.
As of March 2025, XAUT’s market cap was approximately $941 million, with its price tracking gold’s value at around $3,818 per ounce. These products demonstrate how gold can be incorporated into blockchain ecosystems, but they rely on structures designed for that purpose, unlike XRP.
Hamilton’s remarks underline a fundamental distinction between speculative community theories and the technical reality of XRP. While gold‑backed cryptocurrencies exist and continue to gain traction, XRP’s fixed supply and design make such a model impossible.
For XRP, its value path remains tied to adoption, liquidity, and utility within the broader financial system, not to physical assets like gold.
Disclaimer: This content is meant to inform and should not be considered financial advice. The views expressed in this article may include the author’s personal opinions and do not represent Times Tabloid’s opinion. Readers are urged to do in‑depth research before making any investment decisions. Any action taken by the reader is strictly at their own risk. Times Tabloid is not responsible for any financial losses.

