XRP demand is cooling across futures and ETF markets even as the XRP Ledger’s institutional pipeline reportedly expands to $4 billion.
XRP traders have sharply reduced leveraged exposure in recent weeks, with global futures open interest falling by about $700 million from June highs, according to market data cited in a CryptoSlate report. The pullback comes as US spot XRP exchange-traded funds recorded their first weekly outflows after a nine-week inflow streak, raising questions about whether institutional interest in the XRP Ledger can offset cooling market demand.
Futures exposure falls as traders cut risk
Open interest in XRP futures declined from nearly $3 billion in June to around $2.3 billion by mid-July, according to CoinGlass data referenced in the report. The drop suggests traders have been closing positions or reducing leverage as momentum weakens.
The reduction was particularly visible on Binance, where XRP open interest reportedly fell from more than $500 million in mid-June to $399 million by July 10, based on CryptoQuant figures. That decline indicates that one of the largest venues for crypto derivatives has seen a meaningful retreat in speculative XRP positioning.
The data also points to pressure on bullish traders. Long liquidations rose 94% from the prior week and were 172% above their three-month average, while short liquidations fell by more than half. That pattern suggests that downside moves or failed upside breakouts have forced more long positions out of the market than bearish bets.
At the same time, funding rates on Binance moved higher despite the reduction in open positions. According to the report, XRP funding rates increased 266% over the week. Rising funding while open interest declines can indicate that the remaining long traders are paying more to maintain bullish exposure, even as broader participation thins.
XRP ETF flows turn negative after strong run
The weakness in derivatives markets coincided with a reversal in regulated fund flows. US spot XRP ETFs posted approximately $7.2 million in net outflows for the week ended July 10, according to SoSoValue data cited by CryptoSlate.
Those withdrawals ended a nine-week streak of inflows that had brought nearly $200 million into XRP products. While the weekly outflow ranked among the five largest for XRP funds this year, it remains small relative to the broader cumulative picture.
The products have still attracted roughly $1.48 billion in cumulative net inflows, while combined assets approached $1 billion at the end of the week, the report said. That means the latest outflow represents a setback rather than a wholesale reversal of institutional ETF demand.
Even so, the timing is notable. ETF outflows, falling futures open interest and elevated long liquidations are all pointing in the same direction: near-term appetite for XRP exposure has softened across multiple market channels.
XRPL institutional pipeline remains the counterweight
The market pullback comes as the XRP Ledger’s institutional pipeline continues to be presented as a potential long-term support factor. The report described XRPL as building a $4 billion institutional pipeline, suggesting continued interest in using the network for financial infrastructure and tokenized assets.
That institutional narrative has been central to XRP’s investment case, particularly as crypto markets increasingly focus on real-world asset tokenization, payments and blockchain-based settlement rails. Ripple and the broader XRPL ecosystem have long positioned the ledger as infrastructure for financial institutions, rather than purely retail speculation.
However, the latest market data highlights the gap between institutional pipeline development and active market demand. A growing pipeline does not automatically translate into higher transaction activity, stronger ETF inflows or sustained futures participation in the short term.
The report also noted that XRPL user activity has been among the weakest recorded in 2026. If that trend continues, investors may demand clearer evidence that institutional projects are moving from announcements or pipelines into measurable on-chain usage.
Demand signals remain mixed
For now, XRP is facing a divided backdrop. On one side, cumulative ETF inflows remain substantial, and the XRP Ledger continues to attract institutional attention. On the other, recent data shows traders cutting leverage, ETF buyers stepping back and long positions being liquidated at an elevated pace.
The combination matters because futures markets often amplify short-term price moves, while ETF flows can reflect broader investor demand through regulated channels. Weakness in both areas can reduce liquidity and make price action more sensitive to shifts in sentiment.
Still, the latest outflows and open-interest decline do not necessarily signal a lasting trend. XRP products had built a sizable inflow base before the recent reversal, and open interest remains above $2 billion globally. The key question is whether the current reset marks a temporary reduction in leverage or the start of a deeper cooling in XRP demand.
Market focus turns to follow-through
Investors are likely to watch three indicators closely in the coming weeks: whether XRP ETF flows return to positive territory, whether futures open interest stabilizes, and whether XRPL network activity begins to reflect the reported institutional pipeline.
A recovery in ETF inflows or a healthier derivatives market could suggest that the recent pullback was largely a leverage flush. Continued outflows and declining activity, however, would strengthen the view that XRP demand is weakening despite institutional development around the ledger.
For now, XRP’s market structure appears more cautious than it did in June. The token’s next phase may depend less on headline pipeline figures and more on whether capital flows, trader positioning and on-chain usage begin moving in the same direction again.
Sources: – CryptoSlate
