Martyn Lucas, a crypto commentator and investor, has challenged claims that XRP will reach $1,000 per token. In a recent X post, Lucas addressed online narratives suggesting that owning 1,000 XRP could soon create millionaires based on expectations the asset will hit four-digit prices.
Predictions from figures like Jake Claver, who forecasted XRP reaching $2,000 by January 1, 2026, have not materialized. Lucas stated these targets have zero chance of occurring under realistic market conditions.
Lucas calculated the market capitalization needed to sustain a $1,000 XRP price. With approximately 60 billion tokens in circulation and another 40 billion expected to enter the market over time, the total supply approaches 100 billion tokens. Multiplying this supply by $1,000 produces a $60 trillion market cap requirement.
For context, global GDP stands at approximately $120 trillion while worldwide money supply reached about $142 trillion as of September. A single cryptocurrency achieving half the world’s total economic output or over 40% of global money supply appears mathematically unfeasible.
Lucas acknowledged XRP delivered solid returns during 2025, partly driven by institutional ETF product launches. He warned that extreme price projections function as engagement tactics designed to maintain retail investor optimism rather than provide serious financial analysis.
XRP supporters responded by arguing market cap is irrelevant for utility-focused cryptocurrencies. Some claimed the token’s real-world use cases could enable price appreciation regardless of traditional valuation constraints.
Lucas released a YouTube video explaining his reasoning in greater detail. He disclosed purchasing XRP at approximately $0.38, demonstrating his critique stems from analytical concerns rather than animosity toward the asset. The investor emphasized that basic financial principles still apply to cryptocurrency markets.
He addressed assertions that market capitalization plays no role in crypto asset pricing, calling these arguments economically unsound. Market cap indicates the amount of capital required to flow into an asset for maintaining a specific price level. This measure remains valid even for digital assets operating outside traditional corporate structures.


