Something unusual is happening in crypto sentiment. Santiment data shows XRP’s bullish-to-bearish ratio climbed to 2.35 this week—its highest reading in five weeks. Bitcoin sits at 1.05 and Ethereum hovers around 1.4, both in neutral-to-bearish territory. XRP is the only major token where traders are turning optimistic.
The optimism is forming against a brutal backdrop. Bitcoin hovers near $65,000 after $3.8 billion in ETF outflows over five weeks. Fear is dominating the broader market, yet traders are positioning for an XRP move—whales are accumulating, institutional money is flowing in, and exchange supply is shrinking.
Although none of it has translated to an XRP price surge, XRP still trades near $1.40—locked to Bitcoin’s downward trajectory like every other altcoin. With market sentiment turning green for XRP, will the price break free from Bitcoin’s bearish grip on altcoins?
Why XRP Sentiment Is Diverging From Bitcoin

The sentiment gap between Bitcoin and XRP didn’t appear out of nowhere. Over the past few weeks, XRP has quietly stacked institutional wins that shifted investors’ sentiment.
It started with partnerships. Japan’s SBI Holdings launched a $65 million on-chain bond last week that pays investors in XRP—the first retail bond of its kind in a regulated market. Aviva Investors, managing over $275 billion in assets, announced plans to tokenize funds on the XRP Ledger. Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse also landed a seat on the CFTC’s Digital Asset Innovation Advisory Committee.
Then institutional inflows started pouring in again. XRP ETFs logged more than 40 consecutive days of inflows before pausing, pulling in roughly $150 million year-to-date while Bitcoin and Ethereum products bled. Behind the headlines, Ripple has spent nearly $3 billion on acquisitions, building custody, brokerage, and treasury infrastructure that didn’t exist two years ago.
Moreover, three European institutions with $3.4 trillion in combined assets have adopted Ripple infrastructure this February. The accumulation of positive catalysts is shifting how traders view XRP relative to Bitcoin. Although none of these headlines has moved the XRP price much—the advancements are showing up in sentiment before it shows up in price.
Why Bullish Sentiment Might Not Be Enough

Sentiment can diverge from price for weeks, but it can also snap back without warning. XRP still trades in lockstep with Bitcoin during risk-off moves. On February 5, Bitcoin dropped 8% and XRP fell 15%—that 1.8x volatility multiplier hasn’t gone anywhere. Bullish sentiment won’t matter if Bitcoin breaks below $60,000 and drags the entire altcoin market with it.
XRP’s bullish ratio hit a 5-week high at the same time the broader Fear & Greed Index dropped to 9—its lowest reading since the FTX collapse. Those two signals don’t usually coexist for long. Either XRP traders are early and the market catches up, or they’re wrong and sentiment snaps back to match the fear everywhere else.
Price hasn’t confirmed either direction. XRP trades below its 50-day and 200-day moving averages, with sellers defending $1.51 and $1.60 on every bounce. Until price starts breaking resistance instead of fading into it, the bullish sentiment is just a bet that hasn’t paid off.
What Happens Next for XRP
For the first time in months, traders are positioning bullish on XRP while staying cautious on everything else. ETF inflows are holding, whales bought the dip, and exchange supply keeps shrinking, but the XRP price hasn’t responded yet.
Bitcoin remains the problem—XRP doesn’t break out while Bitcoin is bearish. If Bitcoin finds a floor above $70,000, XRP’s bullish setup gets a chance to play out. If it doesn’t, the bullish sentiment won’t save it.
With XRP trading near $1.4o, the key points to watch are the resistance at $1.60 and support at $1.30. Whichever breaks first will determine XRP’s near-term outlook.