Get the latest crypto news, updates, and reports by subscribing to our free newsletter.
Giấy phép số 4978/GP-TTĐT do Sở Thông tin và Truyền thông Hà Nội cấp ngày 14 tháng 10 năm 2019 / Giấy phép SĐ, BS GP ICP số 2107/GP-TTĐT do Sở TTTT Hà Nội cấp ngày 13/7/2022.
© 2026 Index.vn
Spot XRP ETF inflows are continuing to accelerate, drawing renewed attention to the digital asset market as institutional allocations build despite broader uncertainty, according to market analyst Xaif Crypto.
CoinShares data cited by the analyst shows $19.3M in weekly XRP inflows, lifting year-to-date inflows to $178M. Total assets under management for the XRP spot ETF complex now stand at $2.46B.
The same data set indicates $872M in weekly Bitcoin inflows and $196.5M in weekly Ethereum inflows.
While inflows remain steady, XRP sentiment has flipped sharply bearish. Fear levels are now at a two-year high, a pattern that in past cycles has more often coincided with local bottoms rather than extended declines, suggesting potential seller exhaustion rather than deeper structural weakness.
On Binance, XRP’s taker buy/sell ratio has reached an all-time high, indicating that aggressive buyers are overwhelming sellers at scale. The analyst links this to fading sell-side pressure, with liquidity gradually shifting toward demand.
The combination of rising ETF inflows, extreme fear in sentiment, and strengthening buy-side momentum is creating a notable divergence in market signals.
Historically, when fear reaches extreme levels while spot and derivatives activity continues to reflect steady accumulation, it can mark a transition from distribution into early-stage re-accumulation. For now, the analyst expects volatility to remain elevated as both buyers and sellers test conviction.
The key question is whether ETF-driven demand can consistently absorb short-term selling pressure, or whether sentiment-led swings temporarily overpower the underlying accumulation trend.
Overall, XRP is described as being at a critical inflection point where capital inflows and heightened fear are pulling market conditions in opposite directions, with price reaction determining whether conditions evolve into a broader recovery phase or remain range-bound.
Premium gym chains are entering a “golden era” that is ending or already in decline, as rising operating costs collide with shifting consumer preferences toward more flexible, community-based ways to exercise. Long-term memberships are shrinking, margins are pressured by higher rents and facility expenses, and competition from smaller, more personalized…