Key Takeaways
- Ripple’s regional leader likened digital asset payments to early online commerce.
- Infrastructure advances are reducing barriers around settlement, compliance, and usability.
- Future growth could follow a familiar path as consumer confidence expands.
Ripple Executive Compares Crypto Payments to Early E-Commerce Growth
Ripple executive Reece Merrick drew a direct comparison between crypto payments today and the early stages of online retail in a June 24 post on X, positioning digital asset payments within a longer adoption cycle shaped by infrastructure maturity and consumer trust.
“In 2000, the dot-com bubble was bursting and buying things online was globally negligible, estimated at roughly 0.2% of all retail sales. People simply didn’t trust the web with their money yet,” Merrick shared.
He used that period to illustrate how skepticism toward new financial technologies can persist even as underlying systems improve, delaying widespread use until infrastructure and consumer trust become more established.
The Ripple executive opined:
“Just as global e-commerce spent its first decade being dismissed as overhyped, it has only become a seamless daily reality with the rise of infrastructure and smartphones.”
That transformation was driven by tangible shifts in internet access, payment security, and mobile device adoption. Online retail, once a marginal channel, now accounts for roughly one-fifth of global retail spending, reflecting sustained growth supported by advances in logistics, checkout systems, and consumer-facing technology.
Crypto Payments Continue Building Core Financial Infrastructure
Merrick oversees Ripple’s operations across the Middle East and Africa, a region where the company has expanded its presence through partnerships focused on cross-border payments and blockchain-based financial services. The company has also increased its activity in markets pursuing digital asset and stablecoin frameworks.
XRP remains central to Ripple’s payments strategy, functioning as a bridge asset that can facilitate liquidity between different currencies. Ripple has continued developing payment products that incorporate XRP and the XRP Ledger alongside newer offerings such as its Ripple USD (RLUSD) stablecoin.
The executive added:
“ Crypto payments are quietly moving through the same slow, foundational phase before inevitable mainstream normalization. You are not bullish enough.”
Merchant-facing crypto infrastructure has evolved to include payment gateways, stablecoin settlement layers, and conversion tools that bridge digital assets with traditional currencies. These services are designed to simplify settlement, compliance processes, and integration with existing payment systems.
“Today, globally, more than $1 out of every $5 spent on retail happens online,” he noted. Merrick cited that shift as an example of how technologies can move from limited adoption to routine commercial use after years of infrastructure development and growing consumer familiarity.


