Ripple’s XRP ETFs have stunned traditional finance with over $1.5 billion in cumulative inflows since their late 2025 debut. No single net outflow day was recorded in the first month of trading.
Goldman Sachs emerged as the largest known institutional holder. The speed and scale of adoption caught even seasoned market watchers off guard. XRP has now firmly entered the institutional portfolio conversation alongside Bitcoin and Ethereum.

Ripple’s XRP ETF story unfolded faster than most market participants expected. Legal uncertainty had kept institutional capital away from XRP for years.
That changed by mid-2025 when regulatory clarity arrived and the SEC introduced streamlined listing standards for commodity-based cryptocurrency ETPs.
The new standards cut individual review timelines from 240 days to approximately 75 days. For XRP specifically, six months of regulated futures market activity was required before spot ETF approval. Bitnomial launched the first regulated XRP futures product in the U.S. in March 2025, starting that clock.
Canary Capital’s XRPC debuted on Nasdaq on November 13, 2025, recording the highest first-day trading volume of any ETF launch that year across all asset classes.
Bitwise, Grayscale, Franklin Templeton, and 21Shares followed within weeks. REX-Osprey’s XRPR had already been live since September 18, giving early movers a head start.
Ripple took to X to mark the moment, writing: “$1.5B+ in ETF inflows, zero net outflow days in month one, and Wall Street validation.”
The consistency of those inflows during a turbulent broader crypto market drew immediate attention. Analysts had expected institutional appetite to lag behind Bitcoin and Ethereum ETF adoption, but it did not.
By December 16, 2025, cumulative inflows crossed $1 billion, making XRP the fastest digital asset to reach that milestone since Ethereum’s ETF launch.
Bitwise CIO Matt Hougan pointed out that steady inflows during weak market conditions suggested deliberate allocation decisions. He noted demand would likely scale considerably once market conditions strengthened.
Goldman Sachs then delivered the sharpest shock. Its Q4 2025 13F filing disclosed a $153.8 million position in spot XRP ETFs, making it the single largest known institutional holder in the U.S.
The position was spread across Bitwise, Franklin Templeton, Grayscale, and 21Shares products. Millennium and Citadel also appeared among the 30 major institutions now holding XRP ETF exposure.
What amplified the surprise was the timing against the XRP Ledger’s own record-breaking performance.
Daily transactions on the network hit 3 million on March 15, 2026, three times the mid-2025 average. AMM pools, tokenized assets, and RLUSD-denominated settlement flows all contributed to that surge.
Real-world asset tokenization on the XRP Ledger has grown to over $474 million, with total represented value approaching $1.5 billion.
That gives institutional allocators a measurable utility case, not just a price thesis. Goldman Sachs’ building a structured, multi-product position during peak network activity was no coincidence.
RLUSD, Ripple’s regulated stablecoin, has crossed $1.5 billion in market cap and continues to expand its role in cross-border payments. As RLUSD settlement flows grow, XRP’s function as a bridge asset in live financial transactions strengthens further.
JPMorgan has forecast $4–8.4 billion in first-year XRP ETF inflows, and the early trajectory has done nothing to challenge that projection.
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