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.
Gold’s $4,000 Tug-of-War: Central Banks Pile Up Record Tonnes as Fed Hawks Force Steepest Quarterly Drop
Gold is caught in a violent crosscurrent. Central banks just snapped up a record 1,231 tonnes in the first quarter — the highest Q1 haul on record — yet the metal has shed 10% over the past month and briefly pierced $4,000 an ounce, touching a low of $3,984 on July 1 that marks its weakest level in nearly eight months.
The explanation lies in the divergent forces driving the market. Institutional buyers from Beijing to global monetary authorities are stockpiling bullion at an unprecedented clip. China alone added 8 tonnes in April, extending its buying streak to 18 consecutive months, and net imports surged to 317 tonnes in the first quarter — nearly triple the prior quarter’s figure. Worldwide, official sector purchases reached 244 tonnes in Q1, up from 208 tonnes in the previous three months.
But these massive flows are being swamped by a macroeconomic headwind: the Federal Reserve’s hawkish pivot. Strong US economic data have crushed hopes of rate cuts in 2026. The JOLTS report on June 30 showed a steady 7.6 million job openings in May, while core inflation remains stubbornly above the Fed’s 2% target. Markets now price a 30% chance of a rate hike at the next FOMC meeting and a probability above 60% for September, according to the CME FedWatch tool. Rising bond yields are making interest-bearing assets more attractive, draining the shine from gold.
The Fed’s new leadership is amplifying the uncertainty. Chairman Kevin Warsh, installed in June, created five independent task forces to rethink the central bank’s communication strategy, balance sheet management, data governance, inflation framework, and labor market assessment. The Fed currently holds $6.7 trillion in bonds, and any overhaul of its balance-sheet normalization is likely to ripple through markets. The June dot plot reinforced the hawkish tilt: nine of 18 participants expect a rate increase this year, and the median forecast for end-2026 edged up to 3.8%. Nearly all officials see rates holding steady or rising through 2026.
Analysts are scrambling to lower their sights. Citi slashed its short-term target from $4,300 to $4,000, citing a strong dollar and waning physical demand. Deutsche Bank trimmed its current-quarter forecast to $4,300 and also cut its year-end projection. Goldman Sachs, meanwhile, reduced its year-end 2026 target from $5,400 to $4,900, explicitly citing the absence of Fed easing. Technically, J.P. Morgan notes that gold is drifting above its 200-day moving average near $4,340 but capped below the 50-day at $4,730 — a textbook sign of a market under pressure.
Geopolitical developments add another layer of bearish risk. US-Iran talks are under way in Qatar, with no direct negotiations expected. Any tangible progress could further deflate the risk premium that has supported gold since the Middle East crisis erupted in late February. That crisis, combined with surging energy prices, first triggered the selling wave that has now accelerated into a full-blown rout.
The immediate trigger for the latest leg lower came from the labor market. The upcoming Nonfarm Payrolls report, released on Thursday this week due to the Independence Day holiday, will be the next flashpoint. Estimates vary — one survey of economists points to 115,000 new jobs, another to 110,000 — but the consensus is clear: a strong print would seal expectations for a rate hike and likely push gold decisively below $4,000. The unemployment rate is expected to hold at 4.3%.
Compounding the selling pressure is a structural shift in market expectations. Futures markets are now pricing in at least one rate increase for this year, a dramatic reversal from the easing bets that had supported gold earlier. The ADP employment report and the ISM manufacturing index, both due in the coming days, will provide further clues. For now, gold remains trapped between record central bank demand and the most aggressive monetary tightening narrative in months — a tension that shows no sign of resolution.