Flare Maps XRP Utility Push With FAssets and Private Compute

Table of Contents Flare CEO Hugo Philion said the network is upgrading its FAssets system to make XRP more usable in DeFi. He said FAssets v1.3 lets users mint FXRP through a simpler “mint-to-tag” process on the XRP Ledger. Philion also said Flare is building confidential compute tools for privacy-focused, institutional blockchain applications. Philion discussed the update in an interview with XRP-focused YouTuber Crypto Sensei. He said the goal is to simplify how users convert XRP into FXRP. Under FAssets v1.2, users had to reserve collateral and work with agents. Philion said v1.3 reduces that flow to a single XRP transaction. He said users can send XRP to a designated address with structured memo data. That process uses native XRP Ledger features, including destination tags. Philion said the design removes the need for direct exchange approvals or integrations. He said any exchange supporting XRP destination tags could support the process in theory. He also said Flare built the system to limit bridge-related risks. According to Philion, the protocol uses minting caps, overcollateralized redemptions, escrow protections, and emergency custody arrangements. Philion said Flare’s Core Vault can route funds to a regulated custodian tied to Ripple. He said that option would apply during severe protocol failures or attacks. The interview framed the XRP Ledger as the issuance and settlement layer. Philion said Flare serves as the programmable compute layer for DeFi applications. Philion said Flare is also working with exchanges including Uphold on one-click XRP products. He listed staking, lending, borrowing, and loan origination among those services. He said lending markets remain one of the largest missing pieces in XRP’s ecosystem. He pointed to Firelight and Morpho as examples of protocols built around XRP liquidity. Philion described confidential compute as the most ambitious part of Flare’s roadmap. He said Flare 2.0 combines blockchain settlement with trusted execution environments. Under that model, applications could process transactions privately and still prove execution on-chain. Philion said that setup could support institutional-grade DeFi use cases. He said tokenized real-world assets issued on the XRP Ledger could move into Flare’s private environments. There, institutions could trade, borrow, or access compliant decentralized exchanges. Philion said the structure creates a partnership model between the two networks. In his description, XRP Ledger handles issuance and final settlement, while Flare provides compute and utility. After the interview, XRP community figure Eri reacted on social media. She said the model could help “Ripple win business” in sectors requiring confidential computing.