XRP (CRYPTO: XRP) holders have been circling April 16 on their calendars for weeks. Crypto Twitter has been calling today’s SEC event a CLARITY Act roundtable. With XRP up 4% in the past 24 hours to $1.41, traders are expecting the event to push the XRP price above the $1.45 resistance.
But the roundtable isn’t officially about crypto. The SEC’s official agenda covers options market structure, liquidity provider competition, and retail options experience. There’s nothing about digital assets, the CLARITY Act, or XRP’s classification. So traders positioning for a breakout on today’s event are reacting to an event that was never built to deliver one. What should XRP holders actually expect, and what is the real catalyst for XRP this month?
What’s on the SEC’s Roundtable Agenda Today?

The SEC’s April 16 roundtable runs from 9:00 a.m. to 3:15 p.m. ET at its headquarters in Washington, and the agenda has three panels. The first looks at how options market structure affects liquidity provider competition, the second covers the retail customer experience with listed options, while the third focuses on how the options market has grown and what challenges come with that growth.
Crypto, digital assets, and the CLARITY Act appear nowhere on the official agenda. So, this is a traditional securities event focused on how the U.S. options market works, and nothing on the schedule correlates XRP directly.
So where did the confusion come from? SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce, who’s also giving opening remarks today, leads the SEC’s Crypto Task Force—which has hosted public roundtables on crypto trading, custody, tokenization, and DeFi since early 2025. Commissioner Mark Uyeda, also speaking today, served as acting SEC chair before Paul Atkins took over and has been leading the shift in the agency’s crypto policy.
The timing is what set the expectations. The Senate came back from Easter recess on April 13, which is three days before the roundtable, and the CLARITY Act markup window is now open. So, when the two commissioners mostly tied to the SEC’s crypto agenda are set to headline the roundtable, crypto Twitter connected the dots and their assumption was understandable. But none of that changes what’s actually on the schedule today.
What’s the XRP Price Reaction to Actually Expect From the Roundtable

Given the agenda has nothing to do with crypto, what happens to the XRP price today will mostly come from sentiment rather than anything in the event itself. The roundtable isn’t going to produce a ruling or any commentary on the CLARITY Act. The most XRP holders might get is a passing remark from Peirce or Uyeda during opening statements, and that isn’t a catalyst.
XRP’s current move isn’t being driven by the roundtable hype anyway. The rally from $1.32 to $1.41 over the past two days came off the Rakuten news, which enabled 44 million Japanese users to buy and spend XRP through Rakuten Pay. That’s what drove the breakout, and it’s the reason XRP pushed through the $1.33-$1.38 range. So, the roundtable just happened to fall in the same week.
The likely outcome is that XRP holds the gains it already made and keeps trying to test $1.45, which is where roughly 60% of XRP’s circulating supply was last bought. If the XRP price clears $1.45, it’ll be because of the Rakuten move, the steady ETF inflows, and the setup for what comes next in the Senate. It will likely not because of a roundtable that was never about crypto in the first place.
The Senate Vote That Decides XRP’s April Price
The bigger issue for XRP this month is whether Senate Banking Chairman Tim Scott schedules the CLARITY Act markup before the end of April. On Fox Business earlier this week, Scott said it may not happen in April at all, citing three hurdles still in the way—the stablecoin yield dispute, the DeFi piece, and getting all Republican senators aligned. Polymarket’s odds for a 2026 passage have dropped to 54%, down from 82% in February.
If Scott puts a markup date on the calendar in the next 10 days, XRP could break the $1.45 resistance before the vote even happens. But if he doesn’t, midterm politics will take over and shelve it until 2027 at the earliest. So, that’s the catalyst worth tracking this month, not a roundtable about options trading.