XRP Price: Why Ripple’s Institutional Wins Keep Piling Up Without an XRP Rally

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By Sam Daodu Published

Quick Read

  • Ripple has closed 10 major deals so far this year—including Deutsche Bank, JPMorgan, and Mastercard—but the XRP price dropped after every single one.

  • XRP spot ETFs have pulled in $1.36 billion in cumulative inflows since November 2025, but per Bloomberg Intelligence, 84% has come from retail—pension funds and regulated asset managers are still waiting for federal legal clarity before committing capital at scale.

  • Wallets holding 10,000 or more XRP hit a record 332,230 as of May 13, per Santiment, even as XRP remains down 20.7% year to date.

  • The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks. Get them here FREE.

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XRP Price: Why Ripple’s Institutional Wins Keep Piling Up Without an XRP Rally

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XRP (CRYPTO: XRP) broke above the $1.45 resistance yesterday, touching $1.50 after the CLARITY Act committee vote before pulling back to $1.47.

The Senate Banking Committee passed the CLARITY Act—the bill that would lock XRP’s commodity status into federal law—by a 15-9 vote on May 14, with two Democrats, Ruben Gallego of Arizona and Angela Alsobrooks of Maryland, crossing the aisle to back the bill.

The XRP price moved on the news, but the bigger question is whether this committee win finally connects Ripple’s institutional groundwork to actual XRP demand—or whether the same pattern that’s played out all year repeats itself.

Institutional Adoption Is Rising Across Ripple’s Ecosystem

Blockchain concept : Rise and fall of Ripple price. Business man holding tablet showing Ripple symbol on screen with increasing and sharp falling price graph and dollar bills in background.

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Ripple had its strongest month of institutional adoption in February 2026—Deutsche Bank integrated Ripple’s payment infrastructure for cross-border transfers and FX operations, Aviva Investors partnered with Ripple to tokenize fund structures on the XRP Ledger, and Société Générale’s SG-FORGE launched its euro stablecoin EURCV on XRPL.

In late April, Ripple partnered with Kbank—Korea’s first internet-only bank—to deploy institutional digital asset wallet infrastructure through Ripple Custody, enabling secure, scalable management of digital assets within a regulated banking environment.

And just days ago, Ripple Prime secured a $200 million funding facility from Neuberger Berman—which manages approximately $570 billion in assets—to expand margin financing for trading in traditional and digital asset markets. Ripple Prime’s revenue has tripled year over year since the Hidden Road acquisition.

Moreover, Ripple Prime won the top prime broker award at the 2026 Hedge Fund Services Awards Europe. Ripple has built genuine institutional credibility, but the problem is none of it has moved XRP’s price.

Why the XRP Price Isn’t Following Ripple’s Wins

wooden blocks with an inscription ripple and a block symbolizing the rise and fall of the currency index

SergeiShimanovich / Shutterstock.com

Ripple’s 2026 deals haven’t moved the XRP price at all, and here’s why.

The Deals Don’t Use XRP

None of Ripple’s major deals in 2026 so far have created meaningful direct demand for XRP. Ripple’s infrastructure business has continued to expand, but in most of these partnerships, XRP’s role is limited to transaction fees—amounts so small they have little impact on the token’s price.

Deutsche Bank, JPMorgan Chase and Mastercard are primarily adopting Ripple’s enterprise software, not XRP itself. Across many of Ripple’s recent partnerships in the Middle East, Africa, and other regions, settlements are increasingly being handled in fiat currencies or RLUSD rather than XRP. The difference matters because institutions adopting Ripple’s software stack don’t automatically create buying pressure for XRP.

The Sell Wall Above $1.45

Every time the XRP price pushes toward the $1.45-$1.50 range, it runs into the same resistance. A roughly $1.16 billion supply overhang clusters between $1.44 and $1.46, largely from holders who bought at higher prices and are waiting to exit at break-even—and they’ve defended that level every time XRP has tested it this year.

XRP briefly moved above $1.45 following news around the CLARITY Act markup, but the rally stalled almost immediately at $1.50 as sellers stepped in at the same level they have defended throughout the year.

However, yesterday’s committee vote broke it—briefly. The vote pushed XRP above $1.50, but the full Senate vote is what would determine if the rally could extend beyond higher price levels.

ETF Inflows Are Mostly Retail

Institutional demand for XRP ETFs is growing strong. Spot XRP ETFs recorded $25.8 million in inflows on Monday, May 12, their largest single-day total since January.

Franklin Templeton’s XRPZ led with $13.6 million in inflows, while Bitwise Asset Management added $7.6 million and Grayscale Investments’s GXRP attracted $4.6 million. Since launching in November 2025, cumulative inflows into spot XRP ETFs have reached roughly $1.36 billion. However, about 84% of those flows have come from retail investors rather than large institutions.

Pension funds, insurance companies, and regulated asset managers still need federal legal clarity before deploying capital into XRP at scale. Until that happens, even record retail inflow days are unlikely to absorb the roughly $3 billion in total sell orders stacked above $1.45—a wall that includes, but extends well beyond, the $1.16 billion break-even cluster.

What Would Finally Move the XRP Price?

Yesterday’s committee vote is the major catalyst that will change the equation in 2026. The Senate Banking Committee passage alone could push XRP to the $1.70-$2 level, and billions in ETF inflows could flow in by year-end if the bill becomes law—the demand scale that would firmly break the $1.45-$1.50 ceiling and hold above it.

That said, Ripple’s deals built the infrastructure, but the CLARITY Act is what gives institutions the legal cover to actually settle through XRP rather than route around it. Without that piece, the partnerships keep stacking up while the price keeps stalling. 

With it, the same institutions already on Ripple’s rails would get the green light to use XRP as a settlement asset—not just a fee token. That’s when the disconnect between Ripple’s wins and XRP’s price finally closes.

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About the Author Sam Daodu →

Sam Daodu is a crypto analyst who's spent nearly a decade making blockchain understandable—no easy task when most whitepapers read like fever dreams. He writes for 24/7 Wall St., covering Bitcoin, altcoins, and crypto market analysis for investors. Before crypto, he was a tech writer (back when explaining "the cloud" was peak innovation). Since 2018, he's written for CoinTelegraph, Yahoo Finance, The Block, Cryptonews, Zypto, Rain, and more—basically anywhere people want crypto news without the headache. Sam runs MacLabs Marketing, a content agency for crypto brands tired of sounding like AI wrote their website. He also publishes free crypto education on his site for Web3 enthusiasts who think "gas fees" is a typo. When he's not writing or staring at charts, Sam's either: - Watching anime (currently convinced One Piece has better tokenomics than most altcoins) - At the gym sculpting himself into a Greek god - Listening to the music your mum warned you only bad boys listen to Connect: LinkedIn | Email | MacLabs Marketing

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