XRP ETF Record Run Ends: $41M Outflows Break 55-Day Green Streak

XRP ETF Record Run Ends: $41M Outflows Break 55-Day Green Streak

> At a Glance

> – Spot XRP ETFs logged their first net outflow day on January 7, ending a 55-day winning streak that began November 13.

> – Investors withdrew $40.80 million, trimming total inflows to $1.20 billion since launch.

> – The move coincided with a 13% price drop from this week’s $2.41 peak to $2.10.

> – Why it matters: The streak had made XRP ETFs the only crypto funds adding cash while BTC and ETH bled billions.

The longest daily inflow run for any crypto ETF has snapped, as five U.S. spot XRP funds collectively posted their first red day since trading began.

Streak Stats

etfs
  • Start date: November 13, 2025 (Canary Capital launch)
  • Consecutive green days: 55
  • Previous record: Solana ETFs, ~30 days
  • Total assets raised in period: ~$1 billion

Amanda S. Bennett noted the funds had “continuously outperformed all other crypto ETFs” while BTC and ETH products faced heavy outflows.

Price Rejection

XRP’s recent rally fizzled at $2.41 after a 30% New-Year surge. The token now hovers near $2.10, down 13% from that high.

Analyst Steph Is Crypto remains upbeat, pointing to weekly RSI momentum:

> “The weekly RSI has broken back above its moving average… momentum starts to shift decisively in favor of buyers.”

Issuer Lineup

  1. Canary Capital
  2. Grayscale
  3. Bitwise
  4. Franklin Templeton
  5. 21Shares

Collectively they pulled in $1.20 billion net before yesterday’s reversal, per SoSoValue data cited by News Of Los Angeles.

Key Takeaways

  • The 55-day inflow streak was the longest ever for a digital-asset ETF.
  • A single-day $40.80 million outflow ended the run.
  • XRP’s price slide may have triggered profit-taking across products.
  • Long-term bulls still see technical signals aligning for another upswing.

Author

  • My name is Amanda S. Bennett, and I am a Los Angeles–based journalist covering local news and breaking developments that directly impact our communities.

    Amanda S. Bennett covers housing and urban development for News of Los Angeles, reporting on how policy, density, and displacement shape LA neighborhoods. A Cal State Long Beach journalism grad, she’s known for data-driven investigations grounded in on-the-street reporting.

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