Crypto analyst Jesse, appearing on a podcast focused on XRP developments, claimed that Japan has moved to broadly permit use of Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin within its financial ecosystem, a development he framed as a potential turning point for global crypto adoption.
A claimed shift toward Japan
According to Jesse, Japanese regulators have taken a permissive stance on RLUSD that would allow it to be used across multiple sectors of the country’s economy. “They basically green-lit RLUSD as a do-it-everywhere,” he said, adding that the token could be integrated widely across Japan’s financial ecosystem.
He suggested the development could position Japan as an emerging hub for crypto infrastructure. “Maybe what we end up with here is a new emerging region in the world that is way ahead, much like what the US was when Wall Street and Silicon Valley were launched,” Jesse said. Neither Ripple nor Japanese regulators have publicly confirmed the specifics of this claim, and it should be treated as commentary from the podcast rather than confirmed policy.
Jesse argued the timing matters because the US has yet to pass the CLARITY Act, the crypto market structure bill still pending in the Senate. “Unfortunately, I’m wondering if the US is going to actually fall behind on all of this. They need to get this passed,” he said.
Political gridlock in Washington
The conversation also touched on the CLARITY Act’s uncertain path through Congress, where the bill has faced continued opposition from some lawmakers, including Senator Elizabeth Warren. “These next two weeks will decide how the US is going to go forward,” Jesse said.
He also floated a theory linking the bill’s fate to unrelated housing legislation. “I still think there might be an opportunity here where this housing bill is held hostage for the CLARITY Act,” Jesse said, though he acknowledged this was speculation on his part rather than confirmed political strategy.
Jesse closed by comparing the current moment in crypto to earlier technology inflection points. “These are the same signs that I saw then, I see now,” he said, pointing to the early internet era and the 2007 launch of the iPhone as parallels to today’s infrastructure shift.
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