- Linklogis has a partnership with XRPL to migrate its global digital supply-chain finance application onto the XRPL mainnet.
- The real test will be whether the XRP Ledger can manage high transaction volumes, which could make it a model for large-scale blockchain use in finance.
China has long been a pioneer in supply chain finance, and a new partnership is about to push things even further. Linklogis, one of the country’s leading fintech firms, has partnered with the XRP Ledger (XRPL) to accelerate and streamline the process of global trade.
The company already supports customers in 27 countries and regions, moving more than RMB 20.7 billion in cross-border assets in 2024. This collaboration could take that impact to the next level.
The timing couldn’t be better. Global supply chains continue to face significant challenges, including transparency gaps that hinder the tracking of goods and payments, financing delays that leave suppliers waiting weeks or months to access capital, and outdated, paper-based processes that expose them to fraud and costly errors.
Blockchain technology offers a solution. It ensures that manufacturers, logistics providers, banks, and regulators can all view the same information in real-time, thereby reducing disputes, accelerating payments, and introducing a new level of efficiency to the movement of goods and money across borders.
This integration is meant to do more than just modernize payments. It will enable digital assets backed by real trade to move seamlessly across borders, while enhancing security, improving liquidity, and facilitating settlements that occur almost instantly. For Linklogis, it also marks a step into the global decentralized finance ecosystem and a leap into how cross-border trade technology is growing.
Why XRPL Fits the Job
Crypto commentator X Finance Bull described the shift as a milestone, calling XRP “global financial infrastructure in the making.” The XRP Ledger is built for exactly this kind of use case. Launched back in 2012 by Jed McCaleb, Arthur Britto, and David Schwartz, it’s a high-performance blockchain known for settling transactions in just three to five seconds, with minimal fees and far less energy use than traditional systems.
Its unique consensus mechanism helps prevent double-spending and other vulnerabilities, while its ability to tokenize both crypto-native and real-world assets makes it especially valuable for enterprise applications like invoices and receivables. By unlocking liquidity from these real-world assets, XRPL is positioning itself at the center of global trade finance.
Linklogis’s decision to build on it signals strong institutional confidence and pushes blockchain deeper into real-world commerce, placing Ripple and XRPL in direct competition across payments, tokenization, and trade finance, all areas set for massive growth in the years ahead.
It’s not just China. In July, CNF reported that Latin America’s largest crypto exchange, Mercado Bitcoin, announced plans to tokenize $200 million worth of RWAs on XRPL. Analysts forecast the global RWA tokenization market could balloon to nearly $19 trillion by 2033.
In June, Guggenheim Partners revealed that its Treasury-backed fixed-income product will be issued on XRPL through a partnership with Ripple. Its subsidiary, Guggenheim Treasury Services, will offer tokenized U.S. commercial paper with flexible maturities of up to 397 days, bringing traditional finance products onto blockchain rails in a way that could reshape capital markets.

