Firelight Finance debuts xrp staking protocol on Flare with stXRP powering DeFi cover

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Firelight Finance has introduced a new way for investors to access xrp staking while securing DeFi protocols against smart contract risks.

Firelight launches stXRP staking protocol on Flare

Firelight Finance has rolled out a new XRP staking protocol on the Flare network, issuing a liquid token called stXRP that is designed to support a DeFi insurance model. The launch marks Phase 1 of the roadmap and focuses on infrastructure, liquidity and early user participation rather than immediate yield.

Users can bridge XRP to Flare via the FAssets system, then deposit FXRP – Flare’s wrapped version of XRP – into Firelight and receive stXRP on a 1:1 basis. Moreover, stXRP can already move freely across the Flare ecosystem even though staking rewards are not yet active. Firelight expects rewards to begin in Phase 2, planned for early 2026, if DeFi protocols adopt its onchain cover model and start paying fees for protection.

Restaking-inspired design focused on lower capital costs

Firelight’s architecture borrows the core idea of restaking – reusing crypto assets to secure additional applications – but adapts it for a different risk and incentive profile than early Ethereum-based efforts such as EigenLayer. However, the team is explicit that the main challenge with previous frameworks has been the cost of capital.

Connor Sullivan, Firelight’s chief security officer and a former executive at Fireblocks, told The Block that earlier designs tried to compete directly with established ETH yields. “Firelight keeps the key concept [of restaking], that you can reuse capital to bootstrap security, but changes how it’s applied,” Sullivan said. He argued that focusing on assets with a structurally lower cost of capital, like XRP, allows Firelight to narrow in on a single high-conviction use case: DeFi cover and insurance for top-tier protocols.

That said, Sullivan also stressed that incentives have been rebuilt from the ground up. “We narrow in on a single, high-conviction use case: DeFi cover and insurance for top-tier protocols, where proper risk modeling actually matters. And we rethink incentives: short, transparent points programs tied to real participation and real economic value,” he added. The model relies on institutions and DeFi platforms that are willing to pay for robust risk management.

stXRP as a liquid receipt token across Flare

Within Firelight’s design, stXRP functions as a liquid receipt for users’ deposits of FXRP. It can already be deployed across the Flare network, including on decentralized exchanges, lending protocols and in liquidity pools. Moreover, this liquid structure supports an emerging xrp staking market that does not lock users into a single venue or strategy.

Participants in the initial vault will receive Firelight Points, a program aimed at rewarding early users ahead of the Phase 2 launch. These points are intended to link rewards to verifiable participation in the ecosystem rather than to purely speculative activities. However, final tokenomics or conversion mechanics connected to points have not been disclosed.

Building a DeFi insurance layer for XRP holders

Firelight said its broader objective is to give XRP holders a way to earn staking-style rewards while enabling DeFi protocols to access an extra layer of insurance against hacks and failures. In practice, the pooled FXRP backing stXRP would serve as the capital base for potential payouts. Sullivan acknowledged that the entire framework depends on protocols actually choosing to buy this cover.

That is where Sentora, Firelight’s incubator and main technical contributor, plays a central role. Firelight is incubated by Sentora and the Flare network, both backed by Ripple and focused on expanding XRP’s presence in DeFi. Sentora was formed through the merger of IntoTheBlock and Trident Digital, combining data analytics and liquidity expertise under one umbrella.

Sentora’s role and institutional DeFi demand

Sullivan said Sentora has worked with major DeFi protocols on risk-management strategies and liquidity programs, supporting billions of dollars in total value locked. “Our clients are institutions looking to earn yield through DeFi, and one of the biggest hurdles they face is the absence of this specific cover primitive,” he said. “DeFi cover is an essential feature, not a nice-to-have.”

Moreover, Firelight is already in active talks with several DeFi protocols about integrating the cover system. Under the proposed structure, protocols would pay fees to purchase protection backed by the pooled FXRP held inside Firelight. A portion of those fees would then be distributed as rewards to XRP holders participating in the system.

Chain-agnostic cover and claims process

Although Firelight is deployed on Flare, the team describes the system as chain-agnostic. “Any protocol on any chain can integrate with Firelight and purchase cover, not just those on XRPL or Flare,” Sullivan said. That said, achieving meaningful diversification will depend on how many applications choose to plug into Firelight’s cover module over the coming years.

If a covered incident occurs, a claim would be submitted by an appointed agent and then reviewed by an independent consortium. If the claim is approved, payouts are executed automatically via onchain smart contracts. Moreover, this process is meant to provide a structured, rules-based response to hacks or failures, rather than ad hoc governance decisions.

Outlook for Phase 2 rewards and market adoption

Sullivan said Firelight is currently focused on building liquidity for the cover module and expanding the footprint of stXRP across DeFi. Full cover functionality and reward distribution are expected to go live in Phase 2, targeted for early 2026. However, concrete figures for expected yields have not been shared.

He noted that the goal is to find a “fair balance” between returns for stakers and the cost of capital for DeFi protocols purchasing cover. If successful, the stxrp liquidity token could serve as a bridge between risk-conscious institutional capital and emerging DeFi applications that need robust protection.

In summary, Firelight’s new protocol on Flare attempts to pair staking-style rewards for XRP holders with a structured insurance layer for DeFi, with Phase 2 in 2026 set to determine whether the model gains real traction.

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