XRP is growing into a market split between traditional financial infrastructure and crypto-native skepticism.
According to Crypto Slates According to data, the token recently traded above $1.46 as spot market indicators improved, exchange-traded funds attracted their strongest daily inflows in more than four months, and Ripple expanded lending capacity behind its institutional prime brokerage business.
However, this came at a time when derivatives traders continue to resist the move, with Binance futures data showing continued selling pressure even as leverage increases again on the major exchanges.
That tension has made XRP a test case for whether institutional access, ledger tools and market infrastructure can overwhelm a futures market still positioned for weakness.
Spot demand meets futures resistance
The gap between spot demand and derivatives positioning has become the most obvious feature of XRP’s market structure.
U.S. spot
This extends the positive performance of the four funds this month, attracting inflows of more than $60 million. XRP-focused funds have registered total inflows of more than $1.35 billion since their launch last year.


This influx gives XRP a regulated channel at a time when exchange-based positioning remains conflicted. ETFs allow investors to gain exposure through brokerage accounts and advisor platforms without managing direct custody or trading on crypto exchanges.
That opens the asset to a broader group of allocators beyond the offshore derivatives platforms that have historically driven much of XRP’s short-term price action.
However, the mood on the derivatives market is different.
CryptoQuant facts show that Binance’s perpetual cumulative volume delta has fallen to around -$434 million even as XRP has moved higher. Open interest on Binance has increased from around 207 million XRP on April 30 to almost 232 million, showing that leverage is returning after the last reset.


The increase is not limited to Binance. On May 11, open interest increased by approximately $18 million on Binance, $10.4 million on OKX and $8.5 million on Bybit, raising nearly $36.9 million across the three exchanges.
Normally, rising open interest can confirm a stronger trend when spot demand also increases.
However, the setup of XRP is more complicated. The estimated cumulative volume delta on centralized exchanges has fallen to around $575 million even as the token trades higher.
That suggests the rally is not yet driven by broad accumulation in clean spots.
Notably, XRP funding rates point to the same tension. XRP funding on Binance has had a bearish bias for almost three months, CryptoQuant data shows, even though the token is up about 27% over the same period.
This negative financing means that shorts are paying long to keep bearish exposure open.
Ripple adds Wall Street credit to the ecosystem
This bearish futures positioning is running headlong into massive institutional build-up around Ripple.
On May 11, Ripple announced that it had secured a $200 million asset-backed debt facility from funds managed by Neuberger Specialty Finance, the dedicated asset-based investment team within Neuberger.
The company said the facility would support Ripple Prime’s continued growth amid increasing demand for “institutional best-in-class services and margin financing solutions.” The facility is backed by Ripple Prime’s institutional loan portfolio and is structured for flexible withdrawals.
Noel Kimmel, President of Ripple Prime, said:
“Reliable access to financing and strong balance sheets are critical for institutional participants in today’s dynamic markets. This facility allows us to grow together with our clients by delivering greater margin capacity, greater responsiveness and improved capital efficiency.”
Ripple acquired Hidden Road last year and later renamed Ripple Prime. The Brad Garlinghouse-led company revealed that its brokerage platform’s revenues have tripled, driven by “continued growth in client activity and demand for its key services.”
Against this backdrop, this new credit facility fundamentally strengthens the market structure around the Ripple ecosystem. Institutions need robust funding, custody, resolution certainty and reliable counterparties before they can deploy capital at scale.
By embedding XRP and RLUSD into this broader institutional stack, Ripple positions itself directly against heavyweight service providers.
XRPL upgrades lead to increased activity on the ledger
Ripple’s business expansion is unfolding alongside a technical build-out of the XRP Ledger (XRPL) that is beginning to appear in network activity.
In recent months, blockchain network developers have been adding features to meet the needs of regulated financial institutions.
The upgrades are intended to give banks, asset managers and payment companies the control they need to use public blockchain infrastructure without sacrificing compliance, privacy, settlement certainty or auditability.
The new tools include Multi-Purpose Tokens (MPT), which allow issuers to embed compliance features into tokenized assets. Other upgrades, including Permissioned Domains and Permissioned DEX, are designed to create more controlled trading environments.
Additionally, the network recently implemented the Token Escrow feature, which extends escrow functionality beyond XRP to issued currencies, laying the foundation for on-chain delivery versus payment.
Meanwhile, the ledger’s development roadmap also includes indigenous credit markets and privacy-focused Smart Escrows.
Together, these changes indicate a network is being adapted for institutions that want the speed and transparency of shared blockchain rails, but still need consent, risk controls and confidentiality.
Not surprisingly, this institutional thesis is beginning to find support in ledger activity and institutional adoption.
Last week, Ripple tested the cross-border redemption of a tokenized US Treasury fund alongside JPMorgan, Mastercard and Ondo Finance on the XRPL.
Evernorth, an


According to the company, these activities were driven by Bitstamp, Ripple’s RLUSD stablecoin, Justoken, Braza Bank and VERT.
It said:
“The speculative volume on a blockchain comes in bursts. Real utilities look different. Stable. Programmatic. Tied to real companies moving real money.”
What’s Next for the XRP Price?
Given the above, XRP’s near-term trajectory ultimately depends on whether spot demand can translate these institutional advances into sustained buying pressure.
If ETF inflows continue, the cumulative volume delta in the spot market improves and the taker buy-sell ratio remains above parity, the heavily bearish positioning of derivatives could backfire and trigger a wave of forced buying.
In that scenario, negative financing and rising open interest would act as rocket fuel for an XRP rally towards the $1.50 to $1.60 range.
Conversely, if spot market demand falters, that same leverage makes XRP very vulnerable to a sharp reversal.
A market supported by rising open interest without underlying spot support can unwind violently, especially when traders are deeply divided near a contested price range.
This dynamic makes the current market setup less about a single emerging catalyst and more about a fundamental regime change.
Ultimately, XRP is evolving from an asset dominated by offshore stock market speculation to one defined by ETFs, institutional credit, ledger tools, and a tokenized asset infrastructure.
