Rowe Price is one of the most established names in traditional money management. It’s 89 years old, runs about $1.9 trillion, and built its name on mutual funds and retirement plans, not anything you’d call adventurous. On June 12, the firm got the green light from the SEC for its first crypto fund, and XRP (CRYPTO:XRP) is one of the coins it picked.
This isn’t a crypto-native startup or another fund that only holds one token. It’s old-guard Wall Street money moving into crypto with a whole basket of coins, and XRP is near the front of it. So, what does it actually mean for XRP when a manager this big and this cautious decides the token is worth holding?
Why a $1.9 Trillion Manager Entering Crypto Is a Big Deal

Rowe Price is a firm that built its reputation on patient, research-heavy investing for pension funds and 401(k)s, which is the sort of money that can’t afford big mistakes. It spent years watching crypto from the sidelines while smaller firms rushed in, and only now, with the rules clearer and the market more mature, has it decided the asset class is worth offering to its own clients.
When a firm this conservative decides crypto belongs in its lineup, it says something the crypto-native companies can’t. Coinbase or Bitwise launching a crypto fund is expected, because that’s their whole business. A house that answers to retirement savers doesn’t chase trends, so its decision carries a different kind of weight. T. Rowe stepping in means crypto has crossed over into something traditional finance now treats as a normal place to put money.
What T. Rowe built is also a first. Nearly every U.S. crypto ETF so far has been passive and tied to a single coin, like the Bitcoin and Ethereum funds. This is the first actively managed, multi-coin crypto fund from a traditional giant, and if its peers follow the lead, as they often do once one of them moves, plenty more could come.
What T. Rowe Price’s New Crypto ETF Can Hold

The fund is called the T. Rowe Price Active Crypto ETF, trading under the ticker TKNZ. Instead of tracking a fixed index, T. Rowe’s portfolio managers pick between five and fifteen coins at a time and decide how much of each to hold, based on their own research into each token. The fee is 0.75%, and a crypto custody firm called Anchorage Digital holds the actual coins.
It runs from Bitcoin and Ethereum at the top through XRP, Solana, Cardano, Avalanche, Chainlink, and the newer Sui, all the way down to meme coins like Dogecoin and Shiba Inu, fifteen in total. A buttoned-up manager willing to hold Shiba Inu shows how seriously the firm is taking the whole asset class, not just the safe blue-chip names.
The firm is also looking past simply holding coins. The filing says the fund may eventually stake some of its holdings, which means locking up tokens to help run a blockchain in exchange for a yield, once the tax and regulatory rules are clearer.
What T. Rowe Price’s Crypto ETF Means for XRP

XRP isn’t a minor name on that list. The fund uses the FTSE Crypto US Listed Index to guide its picks, and in that benchmark XRP is the third-biggest holding at about 11.4%, behind only Bitcoin at roughly 42% and Ethereum near 19%, and ahead of Solana. When one of the most careful managers in the business ranks which coins are worth owning, XRP comes out near the top.
But the bigger deal is who this puts in front of XRP. T. Rowe’s clients are financial advisors and retirement savers, the kind of people who will never open a crypto exchange or buy a standalone XRP fund on their own. The fund will give them a way to own XRP through a brand they already trust, inside accounts they already have. Big institutions are already buying XRP through its existing ETFs, so this doesn’t start the demand from scratch. It opens a new door to a different crowd.
And it may not be the only door for long. T. Rowe is the first traditional manager to launch a fund like this, and if rival firms follow with their own versions, XRP would likely appear on each eligible list. One conservative giant holding XRP is notable enough, but if a wave of them start treating it as a standard holding, that would matter far more.
Will T. Rowe Price Actually Buy XRP?
Being on the eligible list means the fund can hold XRP, not that it will. Because the managers actively pick the weights, they could match that 11.4% benchmark figure, hold less, or skip it in a given stretch. The approval opens the door, but it doesn’t guarantee anyone walks through it with XRP.
That said, T. Rowe tends to start trading its funds soon after approval, and once TKNZ reports what it owns, the actual XRP weight will be the first real measure of how much a $1.9 trillion firm believes in the token. If you hold XRP, though, the lasting significance is simpler than any single number. The kind of money that was never going to touch crypto now has a trusted, regulated way to own XRP, and that door only opens wider from here.