After its strongest rally in seven years, XRP (CRYPTO: XRP) has entered 2026 with an uncertain future. What once looked like the next breakout digital token is at risk of significant downward pressure in the months ahead.
Let’s reassess XRP’s performance from last year and explore why further volatility could be on the horizon. Is XRP about to turn into a falling knife? Read on to find out.
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During the first half of 2025, XRP surged by about 70%, reaching a price of $3 for the first time since 2018. However, the token plummeted during the second half of the year, ultimately ending 2025 down 10%.
In reality, XRP’s rally had nothing to do with the underlying fundamentals of the token. Rather, its run-up was entirely driven by a speculative narrative.
XRP is a cryptocurrency that is issued by the payments company Ripple. For years, Ripple and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) had been in a legal tiff around whether XRP should be considered a security — similar to a stock or bond — when it’s sold.
Last year, the SEC dropped its lawsuit against Ripple, giving the company — and the crypto landscape more broadly — a major victory over a tough regulatory environment. It didn’t take long for retail investors to create a narrative that XRP had become legitimized and could soon become the next cornerstone of institutional crypto portfolios.
I see two primary headwinds that influenced XRP’s reversal last year. First, the broader cryptocurrency market witnessed heavy selling pressure as capital began rotating into safe havens like gold and silver, as well as more-durable secular themes such as artificial intelligence stocks.
The token’s value proposition could actually be working against it. The crypto landscape is riddled with loads of altcoins that have little or no utility. XRP actually does serve a purpose, though.
Ripple’s system allows customers to send money overseas both quickly and cost-effectively. Banks using its network have the option to denominate their transactions in XRP as a means to circumvent foreign exchange fees. But as it stands today, most businesses are still using fiat currency in their transactions.
Second, many banks are also experimenting with stablecoins, a far less volatile asset. Given the preference for fiat currency, accelerating use of stablecoins, and the fact that the incumbent network — the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) — is also testing a digital infrastructure, smart investors are surely questioning what Ripple’s future looks like. By extension, sluggish adoption of Ripple could prove detrimental to XRP’s future.














