XRP Network Activity Jumps 72% as Whales Accumulate, but Price Tests Dollar Support
XRP’s market performance and its underlying network activity have diverged sharply in recent weeks. The token has shed roughly 71% from its July 2025 peak and currently trades near $1.03–$1.05, dangerously close to its 52-week low of $1.01. Year‑to‑date the decline stands at around 44%. Yet beneath the surface, wallets are multiplying, large holders are accumulating, and the ecosystem is preparing for institutional lending.
Daily active addresses on the XRP Ledger surged 72% to 39,500, driven by a wave of new wallet creations. Whales are taking advantage of the depressed price to move tokens off exchanges. Exchange outflows recently spiked to 123 million XRP, and Binance’s reserves hit a four‑month low. Meanwhile, the number of whale addresses holding at least one million XRP reached an all‑time high, and these large wallets now control roughly 74% of the total circulating supply. In a separate move, an additional outflow of 25 million XRP was recorded, underscoring the breadth of accumulation.
Institutional appetite is also visible in the ETF space. XRP spot exchange‑traded products attracted fresh capital for the eighth consecutive week, pulling in a total of nearly $145 million over that period. Assets under management in these products are approaching the $1 billion mark. Retail traders, by contrast, have largely retreated: open interest collapsed from $1.3 billion to under $150 million, and the Relative Strength Index has fallen to 30.5–32.2, firmly in oversold territory.
On the technology front, Ripple is pushing forward with a lending protocol that would run directly on the XRP Ledger’s consensus layer, eliminating the need for external smart contracts. The proposals, designated XLS‑65 and XLS‑66, would enable fixed‑term loans with pre‑determined interest rates. Credit vetting remains off‑chain; only settlement of funds occurs on the blockchain. The model targets institutional players dealing in government bonds or stablecoins, aiming to replace costly bank loans with efficient blockchain solutions. Currently 34 validators are voting, and an 80% approval threshold must be maintained for two consecutive weeks before the upgrade takes effect.
The ecosystem is also gaining traction through stablecoins and real‑world integrations. Ripple’s native stablecoin RLUSD now accounts for about 12% of all trading activity on the XRP Ledger, with more than half of RLUSD tokens minted directly on the network. Separately, Australian broker Caleb & Brown — which manages over $2 billion in assets — has integrated Ripple Payments, slashing fiat withdrawal times by bypassing traditional bank delays. On the security side, a proposal aims to curb front‑running on the decentralised exchange by requiring users to pay a fee for guaranteed transaction ordering.
Regulatory milestones are adding urgency. Ripple secured a provisional license in Luxembourg to prepare for the European Union’s MiCA framework. The transition period for crypto‑asset service providers under MiCA ends on 1 July 2026. So far, 244 companies have obtained a license under the regulation, with Germany leading at 57 approvals. Firms without a license after the deadline will be forced to cease operations in the European Economic Area, fundamentally reshaping the competitive landscape for digital assets.
While XRP’s price remains under pressure — the RSI signals deep oversold conditions and retail interest has evaporated — the simultaneous build‑up in network activity, whale holdings, and institutional infrastructure suggests a market that may be laying the groundwork for a reversal once sentiment turns.
Ripple’s European Expansion and DeFi Overhaul Provide Counterpoint to XRP’s Steep Decline
Ripple has secured a critical regulatory foothold in Europe just days ahead of a continent-wide enforcement deadline, even as XRP’s token price careens toward its lowest level in a year. The Luxembourg financial regulator CSSF granted the company a provisional CASP license on June 23, allowing Ripple to offer services across all 30 countries of the European Economic Area when the EU’s hard MiCA deadline hits on July 1. Combined with an existing e-money license, the approval lets Ripple deploy its XRP Ledger-based services and the RLUSD stablecoin throughout the bloc, positioning it as one of the most comprehensively regulated crypto operators in the region.
The timing of the expansion stands in stark contrast to XRP’s market performance. The token is trading at $1.04, within arm’s reach of its 52-week low and down more than 21% over the past month. Since the start of the year, XRP has shed over 44% of its value, and at current levels it sits more than 70% below the all-time high set last summer. The relative strength index has fallen to 30.9, deep into oversold territory, with forced liquidations and panic selling compounding the downward momentum.
Yet institutional appetite for XRP exposure has barely flickered. Spot ETFs attracted $22.99 million in net inflows during the final week of June alone, the strongest weekly figure of the month, pushing the monthly tally to $46.5 million. Since the first XRP ETFs launched in November 2025, cumulative net inflows have reached $1.43 billion. The funds now hold roughly $990 million in assets under management, with about 939 million XRP tokens locked inside them. The persistent buying from institutional players stands out against the backdrop of outflows from Bitcoin products and underscores a growing bifurcation between price action and capital flows.
The next major catalyst rests in Washington. The CLARITY Act, which would codify XRP and similar digital assets as commodities under U.S. law, cleared its most significant procedural hurdle in the Senate in early June. A final vote is now expected between July 13 and August 4. Standard Chartered has estimated that passage could unlock an additional $4 billion to $8 billion in ETF investments. The legislation follows March’s joint classification of XRP as a digital commodity by the SEC and CFTC, already a milestone that had lifted the regulatory cloud that hung over the token for years.
Meanwhile, Ripple is pressing ahead with infrastructure upgrades that could reshape how capital moves on the XRP Ledger. Developers are preparing a major DeFi enhancement that would introduce two new protocols for native lending through liquidity pools. Users would be able to deposit assets such as XRP into pools and earn yields, while borrowers gain access to fixed-rate loans settled entirely on the ledger — no external smart contracts required. Community voting signals broad support, and the upgrade would mark the first time the XRP Ledger offers direct peer-to-pool lending without third-party bridges.
The disconnect between Ripple’s corporate and technological advances and XRP’s price weakness has become one of the market’s more perplexing narratives. Stablecoin issuance and payment activity on the network continue to climb, pointing to real-world demand that the speculative token valuation is failing to capture. Whether the unfolding DeFi overhaul and the prospect of a CLARITY Act victory can reverse the slide remains uncertain, but for now, XRP is caught between a foundation that is strengthening and a market that is still capitulating.