Is It Better To Hold XRP Or Bitcoin Through The Next Recession?

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By Sam Daodu Published

Quick Read

  • Bitcoin has historically held up better during periods of macro stress due to its fixed supply, deeper liquidity, ETF inflows, and growing institutional participation.

  • XRP’s performance is more closely tied to global transaction activity, regulatory progress, and market sentiment, making it more vulnerable during economic slowdowns.

  • The next recession could become a major test of whether investors prioritize Bitcoin’s scarcity-driven model or XRP’s utility-driven adoption narrative during periods of financial uncertainty.

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Is It Better To Hold XRP Or Bitcoin Through The Next Recession?

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If you hold cryptocurrencies like XRP (CRYPTO: XRP) or Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC), you’re probably wondering how either asset would hold up if the economy tips into a recession. The question is whether it makes sense to buy more during a downturn, because a well-timed entry in hard times could pay off considerably once conditions start to recover.

So are either of these two cryptos worth buying when the economy starts contracting? Or does it make more sense to cut your losses and exit both positions entirely?

Why Bitcoin (BTC) Still Leads Every Recession Hedge Conversation In Crypto

Young Analyst with Bitcoin and Trading Charts, Exploring Economy

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Bitcoin doesn’t need a bull market to make its case. Its value proposition—fixed supply, decentralized network, no company behind it—holds regardless of what GDP numbers are doing. That’s a rare quality in any asset class, let alone crypto.

During the six months of market stress between October 2025 and April 2026, Bitcoin dropped 52.5% from its peak of $126,000. Yet it still held up better than every major altcoin in the same period. Bitcoin’s resilience wasn’t accidental: ETF inflows, corporate treasury buying, and demand for BTC as a geopolitical hedge were the forces keeping it afloat through the worst of the selling.

There’s also the Bitcoin halving mechanism to consider. Every four years, Bitcoin’s mining reward gets cut in half, steadily tightening supply on a fixed schedule that no recession can pause or override. That scarcity clock keeps running whether markets are up or down.

No other cryptocurrency can make that same argument with a straight face, and that’s precisely why BTC dominates the recession hedge conversation and keeps adding holders every single time.

Ripple’s (XRP) Banking Utility Faces A Real Test If Global Trade Slows Down

Ripple concept with businessman above the city

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XRP’s entire investment case is built on utility, which is the transfer of money across borders. More than 300 partners already use Ripple’s network, and ODL already operates in corridors like USD-MXN, USD-PHP, and EUR-AUD, reducing liquidity costs by 60-70% compared to traditional rails. That’s genuinely impressive infrastructure. The problem is what happens to that infrastructure during a recession.

Recessions shrink cross-border transaction volumes directly, and that could be something that affects XRP more compared to Bitcoin. Fewer imports, fewer exports, fewer remittances—all of it means less demand for XRP as a bridge currency. XRP’s role as a bridge currency through Ripple’s network means fewer international transactions equals less demand for the token.

Bank adoption is another structural problem that rarely gets discussed. Banks don’t have to use XRP with Ripple Payments to benefit from instant transfers, because the network supports the use of fiat currencies. Ripple’s own stablecoin, RLUSD, now competes directly for that same settlement role, with zero volatility risk for the institutions using it.

XRP is already down 40% in 2026 without a recession. So, a real economic downturn hitting trade volumes on top of that is a scenario XRP holders need to think through carefully.

Institutional Money Is Choosing Bitcoin Faster Than XRP During Economic Uncertainty

BTC Bitcoin and XRP Ripple Coins Between Casino Chips. Entertainment and Modern Blockchain Payments Concept.

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Looking at the flow data, it gives better context than the price charts suggest. Institutional ownership of Bitcoin ETFs has climbed to 38% of total assets, up from 24% a year earlier, with hedge funds, pension funds, and registered investment advisors collectively holding more than $40 billion in shares.

On May 1 alone, U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded $629.8 million in inflows, with BlackRock contributing $284.4 million—one of the biggest single-day moves for Bitcoin ETFs in 2026. April was the strongest month of the year, with Bitcoin ETFs collectively adding $2.44 billion. Meanwhile, institutions are continuing to build Bitcoin positions while reducing exposure to more volatile crypto assets like XRP.

XRP ETFs had a strong start—pulling in $1.39 billion since November 2025—but weekly inflows have slowed from over $200 million early on to under $20 million recently. When geopolitical uncertainty rises, retail exits faster than institutional capital does, and the retail-heavy XRP ETF base is structurally less stable during macro stress events than Bitcoin’s institutionally anchored ETF base. 

We’ve seen this play out with Goldman Sachs offloading all XRP ETF holdings due to the XRP price’s steady decline.

Could a Recession Delay XRP Adoption Just As Ripple Expands Globally?

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Ripple is actively exploring new growth markets. Its January partnership with DXC Technology integrates Ripple’s custody platform and RLUSD directly into DXC’s Hogan core banking system, a platform managing over $5 trillion in global deposits across more than 300 million accounts. Ripple keeps sealing deals of this nature, but the problem is the legislative thread holding it together—and that is what matters for XRP.

The CLARITY Act—the bill that would permanently lock in XRP’s commodity classification under federal law—cleared the Senate Banking Committee on May 14 in a bipartisan 15-9 vote. That’s progress, but the bill still needs to clear the full Senate and survive House-Senate reconciliation before summer recess ends the window. Galaxy Research put 2026 passage odds near 50%, warning that delays beyond mid-May could trigger a multi-year reset after elections.

A recession arriving mid-process would almost certainly shift Congress toward economic rescue, pushing crypto legislation down the priority list entirely and stalling XRP’s institutional momentum right at the moment Ripple has built the most credible case for it.

The Next Recession May Decide Whether Utility Or Scarcity Wins

Bitcoin was created in direct response to the 2008 financial crisis, and that origin has always shaped how the market treats it during recession periods.

XRP was built for a world where institutions cooperate and trade moves freely. Both visions have merit. However, the next recession will likely reveal which philosophy the market trusts more when conditions get uncomfortable. 

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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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