XRP’s Institutional Momentum Collides with Price Sinkhole as CLARITY Act Faces Senate Gauntlet
XRP continues to drift in no man’s land, trading at $1.09 — a stone’s throw from the 52-week low of $1.01 plumbed in late June. The token has shed 10.7% over the past month, sits 42% in the red for 2026, and remains 70% below its all-time high of $3.65 from July last year. Yet against this backdrop of persistent weakness, a flurry of institutional activity, whale accumulation, and a make-or-break regulatory vote in Washington are pulling the asset in conflicting directions.
The CLARITY Act, which would overhaul US oversight of digital assets by splitting authority between the SEC and CFTC, faces its most critical test yet. President Trump signed off on the final text on 16 July, and a House subcommittee hearing titled “Building the Future of Finance: How the CLARITY Act Unlocks Innovation” convenes in New York on 17 July. The bill already cleared the House with a 294-134 vote in July 2025 and advanced from the Senate Banking Committee in May 2026 on a 15-9 tally. But the Senate floor remains the true bottleneck. Republicans control 52 seats and need seven Democratic votes to hit the 60-vote threshold. Senator Elizabeth Warren is demanding Trump disclose his crypto holdings by 23 July, arguing the legislation could entrench conflicts of interest — his 2025 financial disclosure showed roughly $1.4 billion in crypto-related income. Betting markets reflect the uncertainty: Polymarket puts the probability of passage this year at 41%, Kalshi at 36%, while the chance of a Senate vote at all is pegged at 79%. Senator Cynthia Lummis has signaled she may introduce a revised draft with a softened ethics clause, and Senator Thom Tillis expressed hope for a deal within days. Ripple’s chief legal officer Stuart Alderoty warned that rejecting the bill would leave the kind of regulatory gaps exploited during the FTX collapse. Should the Senate fail to act before the August 7 recess, a vote could slip to 2027.
On-chain data paints a picture of accumulating whales but evaporating retail enthusiasm. According to Santiment, large wallets scooped up roughly 70 million XRP in the past week alone, while Binance reserves dropped to 2.61 billion tokens — the lowest since February. AOL reports that total exchange-held XRP has tumbled from 3.76 billion to around 1.6 billion over nine months, a seven-year low driven by self-custody migration and ETF inflows. Whales have absorbed another 1.53 billion tokens in six months and now control 74% of the circulating supply. Yet the price refuses to budge higher. The reason appears to be demand exhaustion: weekly net inflows into XRP spot ETFs have collapsed from $131.9 million in May to $59 million in June and practically zero in July. CCN.com reported outflows of $7.18 million in the most recent week, following paltry inflows of just $107,000. New wallet creation also hit a wall — only 2,130 addresses were created on 11 July, the lowest single-day tally since November 2024.
The technical picture offers mixed signals. XRP is trading 4.7% below its 50-day moving average of $1.14 and a daunting 24.4% under the 200-day MA of $1.44, underscoring the medium-term downtrend. But chartists have spotted a potential inverse head-and-shoulders pattern with a neckline at $1.12; a breakout above that level would imply a target near $1.30. On 16 July, COINTURK flagged a TD Sequential buy signal at $1.109, suggesting selling pressure may be exhausting. The weekly relative strength index dipped to around 29.6 in June — only the second time it has fallen below 30, following a similar reading in June 2022 when XRP traded at $0.29 and subsequently rallied roughly 1,100% to its July 2025 peak. Whether history repeats remains speculative; the average holder is sitting on a 45% loss over 30 days and a 47% loss over the past year.
Away from the price action, Ripple’s institutional footprint continues to expand. The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation, which oversees $114 trillion in assets, launched initial equity tokenization transactions on XRP-compatible infrastructure, with Citadel Securities executing the first trades. Citadel had already invested $500 million in Ripple in October 2025. Ripple’s own stablecoin, RLUSD, now boasts a market cap above $1.5 billion, and the company has joined the UK Treasury’s wholesale digital markets initiative — a project that could generate £33 billion in annual GDP by 2035. CEO Brad Garlinghouse revealed that Ripple came within hours of shutting down after the SEC filed its lawsuit in December 2020, burning roughly $150 million in legal fees. Meanwhile, the XRP Ledger has surpassed 8 million activated accounts, and tokenized real-world assets on the network exceed $4 billion. Garlinghouse also stirred debate this week by declaring that many US dollar stablecoins are “useless” and only transparent, regulated variants will survive — a remark that dovetails with Ripple’s heavy push behind RLUSD.
For now, the tug-of-war between building infrastructure and sliding prices leaves traders watching one date above all others: the Senate’s summer recess on 7 August. If the CLARITY Act clears that hurdle, a wave of regulatory clarity could unlock institutional capital that has remained on the sidelines. If it stalls, the technical and on-chain foundations may take much longer to translate into a price recovery.