The most unusual trend in the crypto market this month is not Bitcoin’s price action, but the mechanics of XRP exchange-traded fund (ETF) flows. For 18 consecutiveThe most unusual trend in the crypto market this month is not Bitcoin’s price action, but the mechanics of XRP exchange-traded fund (ETF) flows. For 18 consecutive

XRP ETFs absorbed nearly $1 billion in 18 days, yet the price is flashing a major warning signal

2025/12/12 00:05

The most unusual trend in the crypto market this month is not Bitcoin’s price action, but the mechanics of XRP exchange-traded fund (ETF) flows.

For 18 consecutive trading sessions, the four products have absorbed steady demand, accumulating roughly $954 million in inflows without a single outflow since launch.

The streak stands out amid the volatile crypto market, where Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs have seen significant redemptions.

It also signals the emergence of a buyer base that behaves very differently from the traders who typically govern XRP’s liquidity cycles.

The off-chain holder

Earlier this week, Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse described this new cohort of investors as “off-chain crypto holders,” a label that captures investors who want volatility exposure without the operational demands of exchanges or self-custody.

These are users who buy XRP the same way they purchase exposure to the S&P 500. This means that this cohort purchases the funds through regulated wrappers, custodial intermediaries, and tax-advantaged accounts.

This group cannot be attributed to any single brokerage’s policy change, and certainly not to recent decisions by firms like Vanguard, whose adjustments are too recent to have influenced the multi-week flow streak.

Instead, the shift reflects a broader, slower development: digital assets are becoming more accessible inside the conventional brokerage stack. As more platforms treat crypto ETFs as standard portfolio ingredients, capital is arriving from investors with lower sensitivity to daily price movements.

That helps explain the XRP ETF complex’s “perfect game” of inflows. Traditional ETF buyers, who are allocators inside 401(k) programs, advisers managing multi-asset portfolios, and individual investors using automated model strategies, tend to contribute steadily and sell sparingly.

Once XRP is sitting in a retirement account or as part of a monthly contribution plan, short-term news flow typically does not trigger redemptions.

So, for the first time in XRP’s history, a large share of demand is coming from buyers who have little interest in timing volatility.

Two markets, two behaviors

The steady inflows, however, disguise a deeper tension. If nearly $1 billion has entered XRP ETFs in less than a month, why is the asset trading around $2.09, roughly 20% down over the last 30 days?

In a vacuum, these flows might have forced the price sharply higher. However, the fact that XRP remains range-bound suggests ETF demand is being met by sellers elsewhere.

Derivatives markets help clarify the picture. Binance perpetual futures have shown persistent sell-side aggression, with CryptoQuant data putting the Taker Sell Ratio at 0.53, the highest level since mid-November.

XRP Taker Sell Ratio on BinanceXRP Taker Sell Ratio on Binance (Source: CryptoQuant)

That reading indicates more market-sell orders than buys, signaling that traders are hitting bids rather than waiting for better levels.

At the same time, Glassnode data shows futures open interest has collapsed from 1.7 billion XRP in early October to about 0.7 billion XRP, a 59% drawdown.

Notably, the token’s funding rates have also compressed sharply. Its seven-day moving average has fallen from roughly 0.01% to 0.001%, marking a clear cooling of XRP’s speculative appetite.

XRP Futures Open InterestXRP Futures Open Interest (Source: Glassnode)

Together, these data points describe a market in retreat on the speculative side. The October deleveraging flushed out a large share of leveraged longs, and the subdued funding environment indicates little urgency to rebuild aggressive upside positions.

Against that backdrop, the ETF bid is functioning less as a catalyst and more as a buffer by absorbing supply that might otherwise have driven the price materially lower.

The stability around $2 suggests the two markets are offsetting one another: passive inflows countering active, exchange-driven outflows.

This dual structure is new for XRP. Historically, its price was almost entirely a function of crypto-native behavior, such as exchange flows, derivatives positioning, and sentiment cycles.

However, the arrival of ETF buyers has created a second center of gravity, one governed by slower-moving mandates rather than speculative timing.

A decoupled XRP Ledger

While Wall Street capital circulates through ETF shares, the XRP Ledger (XRPL) is undergoing its own adjustments.

CryptoSlate previously reported that XRPL’s network velocity, the rate at which tokens move between wallets, hit a yearly high of 0.0324 on Dec. 2, suggesting heightened transactional turnover.

Yet Glassnode data shows that total fees paid on the network have fallen by about 89% since February, from 5,900 XRP per day to roughly 650 XRP.

XRP Ledger (XRPL) Total Transaction FeesXRP Ledger (XRPL) Total Transaction Fees (Source: Glassnode)

This combination of rising velocity and falling fees is typical of an environment in which liquidity providers, automated market makers, or exchange-linked actors are efficiently repositioning assets rather than conducting high-value settlement.

It reflects the widening gap between financial demand, as expressed through ETFs, and operational demand, as expressed on-chain. The ledger remains active, but the price discovery mechanism is increasingly anchored in off-chain, regulated markets rather than native utility.

Notably, the ETF’s expanding lineup of issuers reinforces that trend. Canary Capital, Bitwise, Grayscale, Franklin Templeton, and, most recently, 21Shares have turned XRP into one of the most competitive ETF verticals of the year.

Each new listing deepens the asset’s presence inside traditional brokerage workflows, increasing the share of demand coming from investors who may never interact with the underlying network.

What do we learn from this?

What is emerging is a dual-track market.

On one track is the passive allocator, which is steady, rules-based, and primarily insensitive to volatility. On the other hand is the crypto-native trader who is responsive to funding dynamics, leverage conditions, and tactical flows.

XRP’s unprecedented string of ETF inflows, paired with a sharp contraction in derivative positioning, shows the two groups moving in opposite directions.

For now, the inflows are strong enough to counter the unwind in speculative interest. However, the question is how long that balance can hold. Should ETF flows moderate or derivatives selling accelerate, the equilibrium now anchoring the asset could fracture.

Until then, XRP offers a rare case study of what happens when Main Street retirement accounts and crypto-native volatility collide.

The post XRP ETFs absorbed nearly $1 billion in 18 days, yet the price is flashing a major warning signal appeared first on CryptoSlate.

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

Tether's value surges over 40-fold, with a $500 billion valuation hinting at both capital and narrative ambitions.

Tether's value surges over 40-fold, with a $500 billion valuation hinting at both capital and narrative ambitions.

By Nancy, PANews News that Tether is in talks to raise funds at a $500 billion valuation has propelled it to new heights. If the deal goes through, its valuation would leap to the highest of any global crypto company, rivaling even Silicon Valley unicorns like OpenAI and SpaceX. Tether, with its strong capital base, boasts profit levels that have driven its price-to-earnings ratio beyond the reach of both crypto and traditional institutions. Yet, its pursuit of a new round of capital injection at a high valuation serves not only as a powerful testament to its profitability but also as a means of shaping the market narrative through capital operations, building momentum for future business and market expansion. Net worth soared more than 40 times in a year, and well-known core investors are being evaluated. On September 24, Bloomberg reported that stablecoin giant Tether is planning to sell approximately 3% of its shares at a valuation of $15 billion to $20 billion. If the deal goes through, Tether's valuation could reach approximately $500 billion, making it one of the world's most valuable private companies and potentially setting a record for the largest single financing in the history of the crypto industry. By comparison, in November 2024, Cantor Fitzgerald, a prominent US financial services firm, acquired approximately 5% of Tether for $600 million, valuing the company at approximately $12 billion. This means Tether's value has increased more than 40-fold in less than a year. However, since Cantor Fitzgerald's former CEO, Howard Lutnick, is currently the US Secretary of Commerce, the deal was interpreted as a "friendship price" that could potentially garner more political support for Tether. Tether's rapid rise in value is largely due to its dominant market share, impressive profit margins, and solid financial position. According to Coingecko data, as of September 24th, USDT's market capitalization exceeded $172 billion, setting a new record and accounting for over 60% of the market share. Furthermore, Tether CEO Paolo Ardoino recently admitted that Tether's profit margin is as high as 99%. The second-quarter financial report further demonstrates Tether's robust financial position, with $162.5 billion in reserve assets exceeding $157.1 billion in liabilities. "Tether has about $5.5 billion in cash, Bitcoin and equity assets on its balance sheet. If calculated based on the approximately $173 billion USDT in circulation and a 4% compound yield, and if it raises funds at a valuation of $500 billion, it means that its enterprise value to annualized return (PE) multiple is about 68 times," Dragonfly investor Omar pointed out. Sources familiar with the matter revealed that the disclosed valuation represents the upper end of the target range, and the final transaction value could be significantly lower. Negotiations are at an early stage, and investment details are subject to change. The transaction involves the issuance of new shares, not the sale of shares by existing investors. Paolo Ardoino later confirmed that the company is actively evaluating the possibility of raising capital from a number of prominent core investors. Behind the high valuation of external financing, the focus is on business expansion and compliance layout Tether has always been known to be "rich." The stablecoin giant is expected to generate $13.7 billion in net profit in 2024, thanks to interest income from U.S. Treasury bonds and cash assets. For any technology or financial company, this profit level is more than enough to support continued expansion. However, Tether is now launching a highly valued external financing plan. This is not only a capital operation strategy, but also relates to business expansion and regulatory compliance. According to Paolo Ardoino, Tether plans to raise funds to expand the company's strategic scale in existing and new business lines (stablecoins, distribution coverage, artificial intelligence, commodity trading, energy, communications, and media) by several orders of magnitude. He disclosed in July this year that Tether has invested in over 120 companies to date, and this number is expected to grow significantly in the coming months and years, with a focus on key areas such as payment infrastructure, renewable energy, Bitcoin, agriculture, artificial intelligence, and tokenization. In other words, Tether is trying to transform passive income that depends on the interest rate environment into active growth in cross-industry investments. But pressure is mounting. With the increasing number of competitors and the Federal Reserve resuming its interest rate cut cycle, Tether's main source of profit faces downward risks. The company has previously emphasized that its external investments are entirely sourced from its own profits. A decline in earnings expectations would mean a shrinking pool of funds available for expansion. However, the injection of substantial financing would provide Tether with ample liquidity for its investment portfolio. What truly necessitates Tether's capital and resources is expansion into the US market. With the implementation of the US GENIUS Act, stablecoin issuance enters a new compliance framework. This presents both a challenge and an opportunity for Tether. This is especially true after competitor Circle's successful IPO and capital market recognition, with its valuation soaring to $30 billion, further magnifying Tether's compliance shortcomings. On the one hand, USDT has long been on the gray edge, walking on the edge of regulation. Tether has successfully attracted public attention through extremely small equity transactions and huge valuations, and has also used this to enhance the market narrative, thereby breaking the negative perception of the outside world and significantly enhancing its own influence. On the other hand, unlike Circle's IPO, Tether has chosen a different path to gain mainstream market acceptance. In September of this year, Tether announced that it would launch a US-native stablecoin, USAT, by the end of the year. Unlike the widely circulated USDT, USAT is designed specifically for businesses and institutions operating under US regulations. It is issued by Anchorage Digital, a licensed digital asset bank, and operates on Tether's global distribution network. This allows Tether to retain control over its core profits while meeting regulatory compliance requirements. The personnel arrangements also make this new card intriguing. USAT's CEO is Bo Hines (see also: 29-Year-Old Crypto Upstart Bo Hines: From White House Crypto Liaison to Rapid Assignment to Tether's US Stablecoin ). In August of this year, Tether appointed him as its Digital Asset and US Strategy Advisor, responsible for developing and executing Tether's US market development strategy and strengthening communication with policymakers. As previously reported by PANews, Hines previously served as the White House Digital Asset Policy Advisor, where he was responsible for promoting crypto policy and facilitating the passage of the GENIUS Act, a US stablecoin, and has accumulated extensive connections in the political and business circles. This provides USAT with an additional layer of protection when entering the US market. Cantor Fitzgerald, the advisor to this financing round, is also noteworthy. As one of the Federal Reserve's designated principal dealers, Cantor boasts extensive experience in investment banking and private equity, building close ties to Wall Street's political and business networks. Furthermore, Cantor is the primary custodian of Tether's reserve assets, providing firsthand insight into the latter's fund operations. For external investors, Cantor's involvement not only adds credibility to Tether's financing valuation but also provides added certainty for the launch of USAT in the US market.
Share
PANews2025/09/24 15:52