XRP vs. XLM: Ripple’s Big Statement on ETFs Reveals Why Institutions Are Choosing One Over the Other

By CaptainAltcoin
about 3 hours ago
ETF XRPETF XRP XLM GMIX

XRP and Stellar (XLM) compete for the same cross‑border payments corridor. Both are fast, cheap, and built for settlement. But their paths have split dramatically. XRP just received a commodity classification. XLM did not. That single regulatory difference is now reshaping institutional capital flows.

Ripple released a detailed statement explaining how XRP became one of the most actively adopted digital assets in the regulated spot ETF market. The numbers tell a clear story: institutions are choosing XRP over XLM, and the gap widens every month.

Aixbt’s Take: The Cleanest Pairs Trade in Crypto

Aixbt, a popular crypto analyst on X, laid out the arbitrage opportunity. XRP now has ETF wrapper access, bank custody eligibility, and wXRP live on Solana through LayerZero. XLM has none of these. Both compete for the same use case, but the regulatory rails are completely different.

Aixbt calls “long XRP, short XLM” the cleanest pairs trade in crypto right now. The divergence compounds every month institutions can allocate to one but not the other. With XRP ETFs already holding over 769 million XRP tokens and cumulative inflows above $1.5 billion, the market is voting with real money.

Ripple’s Big Statement on ETFs – From Courtroom to Trading Floor

Ripple’s press release explains how XRP went from legal uncertainty to institutional darling. The story begins with regulatory clarity. By mid‑2025, the SEC introduced new generic listing standards for commodity‑based cryptocurrency ETPs. The eligibility path required six months of seasoning on regulated futures markets, which started with Bitnomial’s XRP futures in March 2025.

CME‑listed XRP futures became the fastest CME cryptocurrency futures contract to reach $1 billion in open interest. That milestone underscored institutional appetite ahead of the ETF launches. By November 2025, a wave of spot XRP ETFs debuted. Canary Capital’s XRPC became the most successful ETF launch of 2025 by first‑day trading volume across any asset class.

Bitwise, Grayscale, Franklin Templeton, and 21Shares followed. U.S. spot XRP ETFs did not record a single net outflow day in their first month. By December 2025, cumulative inflows crossed $1 billion – faster than Ethereum’s ETF launch. By early March 2026, inflows had grown to over $1.50 billion, with 773 million XRP tokens locked across custody arrangements.

Goldman Sachs disclosed a $153.8 million position in spot XRP ETFs through its Q4 2025 13F filing. That is the single largest known institutional holder of XRP ETF shares. The position is deliberately spread across multiple products – Bitwise, Franklin Templeton, Grayscale, and 21Shares – signaling a structured allocation, not a speculative bet.

JPMorgan has forecast that XRP ETFs may get $4–8.4 billion in first‑year inflows. Ripple’s statement concludes that XRP is no longer knocking on the door of institutional finance. It has arrived.

Read also: Red Flags in Crypto’s Top 50: XRP’s Admin Key, Pi Coin Scam, and USDT’s Missing Audit

FAQs

Is XLM and XRP the same❓

No, XRP and XLM are separate cryptocurrencies on different networks (XRP Ledger vs. Stellar network), though both were created by Jed McCaleb and focus on cross‑border payments.

Is Stellar XLM a good investment❓

XLM lacks the regulatory clarity and ETF infrastructure that XRP now enjoys, making it a riskier and less institutionally favored option, though it remains a functional payments network with lower market visibility.

Is Ripple a bank❓

No, Ripple is a technology company that provides blockchain‑based enterprise solutions for payments and digital asset custody; it is not a bank.

Subscribe to our YouTube channel for daily crypto updates, market insights, and expert analysis.

The post XRP vs. XLM: Ripple’s Big Statement on ETFs Reveals Why Institutions Are Choosing One Over the Other appeared first on CaptainAltcoin.

Related News