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XRP is trading around $1.20, down 3.5% over the past 24 hours, as markets wait for the FOMC. In a recent discussion on The Rollup podcast, Dom Kwok, co-founder of Web3 education platform EasyA and a former Goldman Sachs analyst, said he believes XRP could rise to more than $1,000 within the next four to five years.
Kwok’s argument centers on mass crypto adoption routing through XRP rather than through Bitcoin or Ethereum. He suggested that new retail entrants may find the larger-cap assets too expensive and could instead gravitate toward cheaper, more practical alternatives.
The stated $1,000 price target by 2030 is far above an institutional consensus range cited in the article of $3 to $20.
On-chain data referenced in the article points to growing concentration among large XRP holders. Wallets holding at least one million XRP control 74.1% of the total supply. Those large holders have added 1.53 billion XRP tokens over the past six months.
The article links improved risk appetite to easing U.S.-Iran tensions, which helped lift broader crypto sentiment. It notes that Bitcoin moved toward the mid-$60,000s, with XRP also benefiting from the move.
Despite the recent dip, the article describes XRP as being in a corrective phase without a breakdown in its technical structure. It cites a weekly green candle of 8% and an RSI near 62, described as constructive rather than overbought.
It also points to a recent 3-day MACD bullish cross that remains intact, and says a decade-long rising trendline has not been violated.
Support is identified in the $1.10 to $1.15 zone. Mid-term resistance is flagged at $1.43 to $1.55, with the article stating XRP has since broken above those levels, setting up a new trading range.