Ripple’s Operational Advances Fall Flat as Goldman Sachs Abandons XRP and Senate Drains Regulatory Hopes
Ripple is signing up heavyweight partners and rolling out new infrastructure at a breakneck pace. Yet the XRP token continues to bleed value, caught between an institutional exodus on Wall Street and a regulatory vacuum in Washington. The disconnect between the company’s growth narrative and the market’s cold shoulder has rarely been starker.
Goldman Sachs dealt the most damaging blow. The bank completely liquidated its once‑massive XRP ETF position during the first quarter of 2026, a stake valued at roughly $154 million at the end of last year. Analysts read the move as a tactical pivot: Goldman had likely been holding the exposure only to service client trades, not as a long‑term conviction bet. The proceeds were instead plowed into crypto‑related equities such as Coinbase and Galaxy Digital. The move underscores a growing preference among large institutional players for capturing blockchain upside through stocks rather than through the tokens themselves.
Retail and smaller institutional money tell a different story. US spot ETFs on XRP pulled in $6.55 million on July 2 alone, marking the eighth consecutive week of positive flows. Assets under management across these products have swelled to around $988 million, while cumulative inflows since launch have reached nearly $1.4 billion. On‑chain data reinforces the accumulation narrative: the number of active XRP wallets surged 72%, and balances on exchanges declined, suggesting holders are moving tokens into custody rather than preparing to sell.
Ripple’s business development machine has not slowed. On July 4 the company launched a startup accelerator on the XRP Ledger in partnership with Hong Kong‑based Brinc, part of a broader push to position the network as a platform for real‑world applications rather than mere speculation. The same day, Ripple kickstarted a donation campaign tied to the 250th anniversary of US Independence Day, joining forces with the Call of Duty Endowment, an organisation that has already placed 165,000 veterans into jobs with a target of 200,000 by 2030. Donors can contribute cash, stocks, or crypto — including XRP and Ripple’s own stablecoin RLUSD — and Ripple will match gifts up to $10,000.
The company also signed on as a member of the newly formed Open USD Consortium, a stablecoin initiative backed by Visa, Mastercard, and BlackRock. The consortium’s dollar‑pegged token is slated for launch in 2026 on blockchains such as Solana and Polygon. Notably absent from the list of supported networks is the XRP Ledger itself. Ripple president Monica Long stressed the importance of cross‑chain payments, but the omission underscores a persistent reality: the company’s strategic wins do not automatically translate into demand for XRP.
On its own ledger, Ripple’s home‑grown stablecoin RLUSD is gaining traction. A third‑party research report found that RLUSD had already processed over $2.5 billion in settlement volume, with nearly $900 million coming from direct trading pairs against XRP. Yet even that usage has done little to arrest the token’s slide.
The price picture remains grim. XRP changed hands at $1.09 on Friday, up 3.25% on the day but nursing a weekly gain of 4.24%. Over the past month the token has lost 10.11%, and it is down 42% since the beginning of the year. The 12‑month decline stands at 51.38%. At $1.09, the token is trading 70% below its 52‑week high of $3.65 set in July 2025, while hugging just 7.34% above the 52‑week low of $1.01. All major moving averages sit above the current price: the 50‑day line at $1.21 (10.51% higher) and the 200‑day average at $1.49 (a 27.07% gap). The relative strength index of 42.9 signals neither overbought nor oversold conditions, but annualised volatility of 42.74% keeps the risk profile elevated.
A cloud of regulatory uncertainty continues to hang over the asset. The CLARITY Act, which would classify XRP as a commodity, remains stalled in the Senate. Lawmakers left for summer recess on June 29 and will not return until July 13, pushing any floor vote back to at least late July, with early August now the more realistic target. Over in California, the compliance deadline for the state’s Digital Financial Assets Law passed on July 1 without any enforcement action against Ripple, removing a short‑term friction point but doing nothing to clarify the federal picture.
For now, Ripple’s operational momentum and XRP’s price action are heading in opposite directions. Infrastructure players are lining up to work with the company, and on‑chain metrics suggest a committed holder base. But until a clear regulatory framework emerges — and until institutional giants like Goldman Sachs show a willingness to hold XRP rather than trade around it — the token’s long slide may have further to run.
Beyond the Price Slide: XRP’s Validators and Regulators Are Reshaping the Network’s Institutional Role
The XRP ecosystem is undergoing a quiet transformation that has little to do with its languishing price. While the token hovers just above a yearly low at $1.05, two parallel processes are unfolding that could fundamentally alter the network’s utility: a governance vote on a native lending protocol and a series of regulatory breakthroughs across key markets.
Validators Weight the Lending Infrastructure
On June 30, CoinLaw reported that the XRP Ledger’s validators are now voting on two proposed standards — XLS-65 (Single Asset Vault) and XLS-66 (Lending Protocol). These standards, already available for testing on the devnet, aim to embed a full-fledged credit infrastructure directly into the blockchain’s protocol layer. To pass, each proposal needs the approval of more than 80 percent of trusted validators over an uninterrupted two-week period.
Ripple’s design separates credit decisioning from execution. Underwriting, legal documentation and risk assessment remain external. The ledger handles what happens after a loan is agreed: pooling liquidity into Single Asset Vaults and then converting that liquidity into fixed-term loans with standardized repayment rules, interest calculations and servicing mechanics. The company explicitly positions this against existing on-chain lending platforms such as Aave, Compound, Maple and Clearpool, arguing that institutional lenders need more reliable execution standards than application-level governance can provide.
First-loss capital structures are built into the protocol, allowing pool operators to absorb initial losses from subordinate positions. The intended use cases include short-term liquidity for payment service providers, market-maker inventory financing and deployment of idle digital assets. Importantly, the proposal does not turn XRP into a staking asset — the token is just one of several assets that could flow into the vaults.
Europe’s MiCA Deadline Comes with a Ripple Edge
The same week the validator vote opened, the European Union’s MiCA transition period expired on July 1, 2026. Crypto-service providers now require a full CASP (Crypto-Asset Service Provider) license to operate across the bloc. Ripple preempted the deadline by securing a provisional CASP authorization from Luxembourg’s CSSF on June 23, supplementing an e-money license obtained in February. That combination allows Ripple to offer its RLUSD stablecoin and other services across all 30 countries of the European Economic Area with a single integration.
The achievement is notable: of more than 1,200 firms that held national legacy licenses, fewer than 250 have managed to obtain the full CASP authorization. Ripple is among that small cohort.
U.S. Policy Moves on Two Fronts
Across the Atlantic, California’s new Digital Financial Assets Law took effect on July 1, requiring digital asset providers to hold a license or have an active application on file. Penalties for non-compliance reach $100,000 per day. Meanwhile, the CLARITY Act — legislation that would formally classify XRP as a digital commodity — cleared the Senate Banking Committee on May 14 and was placed on the Senate calendar in early June. A floor vote is expected in late July or early August. If the Senate recesses for the summer without acting, the bill would slip into 2027.
Whales Accumulate as Retail Leverage Drains
Despite the fundamental progress, XRP’s price has fallen nearly 19 percent over the past 30 days and stands more than 50 percent below its level a year ago. The token’s relative strength index sits at 33.6, deep in oversold territory, and the price is roughly 30 percent below its 200-day moving average of $1.49. The all-time high of $3.65, set in July 2025, is now almost three-quarters away.
Yet large wallet holders — so-called whales — have added approximately 1.53 billion tokens to their positions over the past six months, pushing their collective share of the circulating supply to about 74 percent. At the same time, open interest has fallen to a yearly low, suggesting that leveraged short positions are unwinding and selling pressure from derivatives is easing.
Institutional interest continues via a different channel. Spot-based XRP ETFs recorded net inflows of $59.4 million in June, marking the third consecutive month of positive flows.
A Partnership with Major Backing
Ripple has also positioned itself as a day-one integration partner for Open USD, a stablecoin project backed by BlackRock, Visa, Mastercard and Coinbase. The initiative is scheduled to launch later this year, adding another potential use case for Ripple’s settlement infrastructure.
The Escrow Routine Continues
On July 1, the monthly escrow release proceeded as usual: 1 billion XRP were unlocked in three tranches of 200 million, 300 million and 500 million tokens. The release is part of Ripple’s routine supply management and has been in place for years.
The Real Market Question
The technical picture offers a tentative floor. XRP is currently defending the support zone between $0.90 and $1.00, a level from which bounces have occurred in the past. Resistance sits near $1.13. Historically, July has been the token’s strongest month, with an average gain of 9.53 percent across all recorded years.
But the more consequential metric for the network’s future is not the daily price candle — it is the validator vote tally. If enough validators sustain approval above 80 percent for two consecutive weeks, the XRP Ledger will gain a native borrowing and lending capability that institutional players have long demanded. If the threshold is not met, the lending protocol remains what it is today: tested on devnet, but not live on mainnet.