A significant divergence is emerging between the price trajectory of XRP and the operational success of Ripple, the company most closely associated with the digital asset. As Ripple’s payment infrastructure celebrates major milestones, institutional capital is flowing out of exchange-traded funds (ETFs) tied to XRP, reaching its most pronounced level in weeks. A primary source of ongoing uncertainty for XRP is the stalled progress of the Digital Asset Market CLARITY Act in the U.S. Congress. Although the legislation, which would formally classify XRP as a digital commodity alongside Bitcoin and Ethereum, passed the House of Representatives with a clear majority in July 2025, it is currently delayed.
The holdup stems from a dispute between the banking sector and the cryptocurrency industry over proposed stablecoin regulations. The passage of this act is viewed as a potential catalyst for XRP, as it would remove a major regulatory obstacle preventing banks and asset managers from integrating the asset into their systems. Reflecting the impact of this delay, Standard Chartered recently revised its 2026 price forecast for XRP down from $8 to $2.80, marking the most substantial percentage cut within the bank’s entire crypto portfolio.
The bank cited the continued absence of anticipated institutional inflows as the reason. Data from March 6 revealed substantial single-day withdrawals from XRP-focused ETFs, totaling $16.62 million. This figure represents the largest daily outflow recorded for the current month. The 21Shares XRP ETF experienced the most significant redemption at $10.60 million.
It was followed by the Bitwise fund, which saw outflows of $3.65 million, and the Grayscale product, with $2.37 million withdrawn. This activity signals a second wave of institutional caution within a matter of weeks. Both the Canary XRP ETF and the Franklin XRP ETF reported zero inflows, a clear indicator that investors are opting to remain on the sidelines due to the token’s volatile price action. Despite this recent pressure, the overall picture for XRP ETFs remains positive on a cumulative basis.
Since their launch, these investment vehicles have collectively gathered net inflows of $1.24 billion. Consequently, analysts suggest the current withdrawals may represent a short-term position adjustment rather than a fundamental shift in long-term sentiment. Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying XRP? In stark contrast to the token’s market performance, Ripple’s enterprise business is demonstrating robust growth.
The company’s payment platform has now processed more than $100 billion in total transaction volume. Ripple is expanding this infrastructure into a comprehensive full-stack solution, enabling businesses to manage fiat currencies and stablecoins through a single provider. This suite includes services for custody, treasury automation, and settlement. Stablecoins are playing an increasingly prominent role; many of the over 300 banks within Ripple’s network primarily utilize its messaging and tracking tools, often settling transactions without using XRP.
The coming weeks will be critical in determining whether momentum for the CLARITY Act builds in the Senate and if new decentralized finance (DeFi) features on the XRP Ledger can attract meaningful activity. For now, the disconnect between corporate progress and token performance persists.














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