3 Parts of XRP’s Thesis Aren’t Working. Should You Sell It?

3 Parts of XRP’s Thesis Aren’t Working. Should You Sell It?


Something uncomfortable is happening under the hood of XRP (CRYPTO: XRP). Compared to a year ago, the daily active accounts on the XRP Ledger (XRPL) have been sliding, the volume of payments moving between wallets is declining, and the amount of XRP burned keeps shrinking. For investors who bought XRP because they believed it would become a widely used bridge currency, a retail payments rail, or an increasingly scarcer coin through fee burns, these trends point in the wrong direction, and they suggest that those elements of the coin’s investment thesis aren’t working as intended.

Does that mean you should sell your XRP?

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3 Parts of XRP’s Thesis Aren’t Working. Should You Sell It?
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The classic investment thesis for XRP leaned on three pillars: its adoption as a cross-border bridge currency, its growing organic usage driving demand, and its supply diminishing over time as XRP is permanently destroyed through the payment of the fees associated with each transaction on the network. All three of those pillars are deteriorating.

Average daily active wallet addresses peaked at a hair over 49,000 in July 2025, and they’re now down to under 16,000. The daily number of payments from one wallet to another was a bit over 1 million on April 8, 2025, and 12 months later, it’s at just 748,430. And whereas 2,663 XRP were burned a year ago on that same day, on that day this year a scant 455 XRP was burned due to network activity.

So the XRP ledger probably isn’t seeing increased adoption among users looking to transfer money across international boundaries, and the coin itself simply isn’t in a state of increasing demand to cover transaction costs.

For what it’s worth, the last 12 months have been especially tough for the blockchain, as its price fell for much of that period. Zooming out to look at the same data over the last three years, however, paints a more positive picture.

If you’re a holder, you’ll be relieved to hear that the XRPL’s trajectory has shifted in ways that make the public metrics described above into a poorer proxy for progress than they were in the past.

For example, in February, the XRPL activated a permissioned decentralized exchange (DEX) for regulated financial institutions. That DEX is essentially a members-only trading floor where banks can trade with each other, supported by built-in know-your-customer (KYC) and anti-money-laundering (AML) compliance.


finance.yahoo.com
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