BULLISH
2024
2024
WHEN
XRP
Key Takeaways
When XRP traded above $2 in late 2024 and reached highs near $3.40 in early 2025, it drew a significant wave of new buyers. Those buyers are now the dominant cohort in Glassnode’s realized loss data. More than 50% of XRP’s circulating supply is currently held at a cost basis above the current price of approximately $1.32.

That number reframes everything that follows. What looks like a market consolidating above support is also a market where the majority of participants are sitting on losses, concentrated among holders who bought between one and three months ago, the people who entered during or just after the peak. The 30-day moving average of realized losses by age cohort confirms it: that cohort is the heaviest, and they are not selling.
Understanding why they are not selling, and what that actually means for price, is where the on-chain picture gets more precise.
XRP exchange reserves on Binance have fallen from approximately 2.81 billion XRP in mid-March to 2.74 billion as of early April. On its own, declining exchange reserves typically signal reduced selling pressure, fewer coins on exchanges means less supply available to hit the market.

The context here changes that reading entirely. Reserves peaked alongside price near $1.55 in mid-March, then fell as price fell. That parallel decline is the tell. When holders withdraw XRP from exchanges out of conviction, choosing to hold rather than sell, reserves fall while price either holds or rises.
That is not what is happening here. Reserves are falling because activity itself is falling. Fewer coins are on exchanges because fewer participants are doing anything at all.
That distinction carries directly into what the whale data shows, and it makes the whale data harder to read simply as good news.
Whale-to-exchange flow on Binance currently stands at 261, a number that reads as effectively zero against a historical range that reached 55,000–60,000 during peak activity in mid-2025. Large holders are not sending XRP to exchanges. In the narrowest sense, that removes one of the primary sources of downward pressure. When whales move coins to exchanges in volume, it signals preparation to sell. That signal is absent.

But the absence of that signal is not a bullish signal in itself, and that distinction is where most surface-level readings of this data go wrong. For price to move meaningfully higher, two conditions need to hold simultaneously: sellers stepping back and buyers stepping in. The whale flow data confirms the first condition. It says nothing about the second. Large holders have withdrawn from activity entirely. They are not selling. They are also not accumulating in any visible way on-chain.
The result is a price structure that connects back directly to the exchange reserve picture: both are declining, both reflect the same underlying condition, and neither is generating the demand side that a sustained price recovery requires. Reduced selling pressure without increased buying pressure produces one outcome, sideways drift with a slight negative bias.
The three data sets are not separate stories. They are the same story told from three different angles: XRP is a market in suspension.
More than half of holders are underwater and not selling. Whales are at historically low activity levels. Reserves are declining alongside price. None of those conditions push price higher on their own. They create an environment where downward pressure is limited, and where the next directional move depends entirely on something the on-chain data cannot provide.
That something is external. A macro catalyst, a development specific to Ripple or the XRP Ledger, or a broader shift in crypto market sentiment driven by this week’s inflation data. CryptoQuant’s analysis frames it directly: the sideways, slightly negative price structure indicates the market is waiting for a news-driven catalyst that can generate volume. Without that, the current structure persists, range-bound between $1.30 and $1.35, with neither side committing.
The 50% unrealized loss figure is not just a data point. It describes the psychological condition of the XRP holder base right now. A majority of participants bought higher and are waiting, for recovery, for capitulation, or for a catalyst that forces the market to choose between the two.
That overhang does not resolve quietly. It ends one of two ways: price recovers toward previous entry points and those holders eventually sell into strength, or price falls further and forces a capitulation that clears the loss overhang and resets the base. The whale and exchange data show that neither process has begun.
The market is suspended between those two outcomes, and the resolution, when it comes, will be driven by the same macro forces shaping every other asset this week: inflation data, Fed signals, and whether the geopolitical situation around U.S.-Iran talks moves toward resolution or deteriorates further.
XRP’s on-chain structure does not determine which of those outcomes arrives first. It only tells us that when one does, the market is primed to move fast, because the conditions for a sharp move in either direction are already in place.
The post XRP: More Than 50% of Holders Are Underwater: Supply Is Frozen, Demand Is Missing appeared first on Coindoo.