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XRP is struggling to hold current support levels amid broader market uncertainty. In the final days of March, large XRP holders on two major exchanges made moves that the price action has not yet fully reflected.
The report’s comparative framework places the late-March data in context. A key reference point remains the February 6 spike, when 530 million XRP moved in a single day—an exceptional level that has not been matched since.
By contrast, the late-March wave totaled 442 million XRP across two sessions, which is below the single-day February record. However, comparing late March only to February’s peak understates the shift.
The more relevant comparison is what followed immediately after February: a sustained retreat to roughly 50 million XRP per day through much of March. Against that baseline, the late-March readings did not just recover—they multiplied by nearly nine times the recent daily average across two consecutive sessions.
The report characterizes this reacceleration as a structural signal rather than a random fluctuation. Whale-level withdrawal activity does not return to near-February scale after weeks of quiet by accident. When outflows of this magnitude reappear after a subdued stretch, the pattern typically indicates a renewed and deliberate pickup in large-holder movement—participants who had been inactive choosing, simultaneously, to act.
The market-structure consequence is direct. Nearly $600 million in XRP moved away from immediate sell-side availability over 48 hours. That supply is no longer on the exchanges, meaning it cannot be sold from where it now sits.
Whether the holders withdrew the XRP in anticipation of a price move or simply for custody preferences, the effect is the same: it reduces the available XRP float on Binance and Coinbase, which the report says is meaningful for short-term price conditions.

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