The crypto market had big expectations for XRP this week, but reality delivered something messier.

After Canary Capital’s XRPC ETF crushed day-one records with $58 million in trading volume and $245 million in inflows on November 13, XRP looked poised for a breakout.

Instead, the token stumbled hard, losing 4.3% to plunge from $2.31 to $2.22 in the 24 hours ending November 16 at 02:00 UTC.

The bigger picture matters here: Bitcoin’s struggle below $100,000, combined with risk-averse market sentiment and liquidation cascades, seems to have overwhelmed whatever institutional enthusiasm those fresh ETF flows promised.

It’s a reminder that even landmark crypto infrastructure moves can’t shield an asset from brutal macro headwinds, and that Ripple’s token still dances to Bitcoin’s beat.​

When ETF magic fades: Institutional interest meets market reality

The XRPC launch should have been a turning point. Investors hadn’t seen a crypto ETF open with this kind of velocity in years.

But the real story wasn’t the applause on day one; it was the deafening silence that followed.

By Friday, November 15, trading volume in the XRPC ETF had cratered to just $26 million, down 55% from Thursday’s high.

That kind of dramatic pullback signals one thing: the early-window buyers got what they wanted, and now there are fewer believers pushing fresh capital.​

Analysts watching the tape say the disconnect is stark.

Yes, institutional interest exists, as the inflows proved that. But broader crypto market pressures overwhelmed any XRP-specific catalysts.

Bitcoin’s weakness at $95,000-$96,000 territory created a risk-off cascade that hit altcoins especially hard. ETF flows showed institutional interest, sure, but fear dominated the broader market narrative.

The real danger: technical support zones are crumbling. XRP broke through the critical $2.24 support barrier with aggressive volume, 74 million XRP traded at peak selling, a 69% jump above daily averages.

That kind of capitulation selling typically signals exhaustion, but it also means the next support at $2.16 is now the line in the sand.​

The Bitcoin anchor: Why XRP can’t escape its big brother

Here’s the uncomfortable truth for Ripple believers: XRP remains shackled to Bitcoin’s movements in ways that fundamentals simply cannot override.

Analyst Versan Aljarrah, founder of Black Swan Capitalist, doesn’t mince words about this dynamic. He argues XRP will stay trapped in volatile, speculation-driven price action “as long as it remains under Bitcoin’s influence”.

Aljarrah goes further as per a Binance report, calling Bitcoin “a debt-based speculative asset” that drags the entire market down through herd mentality rather than real economic value.​

The math backs up this criticism. When Bitcoin tanks, it triggers leveraged liquidations across the entire ecosystem.

Traders holding XRP longs on margin get wiped out, forced selling accelerates, and suddenly all that positive news about payments infrastructure and regulatory clarity means nothing.

During Thursday’s selloff, open interest in XRP futures remained weak, hovering around $3.78 billion, down from $4.17 billion in early November.

That tells traders one thing: conviction is fading, and when conviction dies in crypto, prices follow.​

What makes this dependency particularly frustrating for XRP advocates is the irony.

Ripple has spent years building real infrastructure. It’s secured regulatory licenses, inked bank partnerships, and established integration with global payment networks.

The fundamentals are arguably as strong as they’ve been. Yet the market continues pricing XRP like just another altcoin lottery ticket riding Bitcoin’s coattails.

Until that changes, and Aljarrah believes a “necessary separation” is coming, even the biggest ETF launches will only provide temporary relief.​

The next few days will matter. More Franklin Templeton’s EZRP launches on November 18, followed by Bitwise on November 20, and several others through November 25.

If those institutional vehicles can stabilize flows and rebuild conviction, XRP might reclaim the $2.30 zone and eventually test $2.31 resistance.

But if Bitcoin stays weak and macro sentiment sours, even Wall Street’s entry ticket might not be enough to save Ripple’s token from another dive toward $2.16.​

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