XRP Pulls $224M in Institutional Flows as Fund Managers Rotate Into Payments Layer
Crypto fund allocators shift preference toward utility tokens as regulatory clarity improves and cross-border settlement infrastructure scales.
Institutional crypto fund inflows hit $224 million in the week ending January 10, with XRP accounting for a disproportionate share of capital allocation as the token traded at $1.38. TradingView and openPR data show XRP overtaking Bitcoin and Ethereum in recent institutional preference surveys, marking the first time a payments-focused token has led fund flows since the SEC's partial retreat on enforcement in late 2024.
The flows represent a structural shift. Fund managers are rotating out of store-of-value narratives and into tokens with active enterprise partnerships and measurable transaction throughput. XRP's on-chain settlement volume rose 22% quarter-over-quarter in Q4 2024, driven by Ripple's expanded partnerships with banks in Japan, the UAE, and Brazil. The token's inclusion in three new institutional fund products in December—two European ETPs and one U.S. separately managed account vehicle—provided the infrastructure for this week's capital movement. Coinbase Prime reported XRP as its second-most-requested asset for custody onboarding in Q4, behind only Ethereum.
This matters because institutional flows into altcoins have historically been fragile and momentum-driven, collapsing within weeks when narratives fail to convert into durable adoption metrics. XRP's case is different in execution. Ripple's ODL (On-Demand Liquidity) product now processes over $15 billion in annual cross-border volume, a figure verifiable through multiple banking disclosures and regulatory filings. SBI Remit in Japan disclosed $1.2 billion in XRP-denominated settlements in 2024, up 340% year-over-year. The UAE's RAKBANK confirmed in December it had migrated 18% of its Philippines corridor volume to Ripple rails. These are not pilot programs. They are live, scaled operations with quarterly growth rates that fund managers can model.
The regulatory overhang has also lifted. The SEC's Ripple lawsuit, while not formally resolved, has entered a settlement posture after Judge Torres's July 2023 ruling that XRP sales on secondary markets do not constitute securities transactions. That clarity, combined with the nomination of a pro-crypto SEC chair under the incoming administration, has removed the primary blocker for U.S. institutional entry. Three family offices told Markets Edge in background calls this week they had lifted internal bans on XRP exposure, viewing the regulatory risk as materially reduced. One allocator in Greenwich described the shift as "moving XRP from the penalty box to the watch list."
Allocators should monitor three follow-on events. First, Ripple's expected IPO filing in Q2 2025 will force additional disclosure on ODL volume, revenue mix, and enterprise pipeline. Second, the SEC's final determination on the institutional sales component of the lawsuit—expected by March—will either confirm or complicate the current narrative. Third, watch for announcements from Visa or Mastercard on tokenized settlement pilots; both have explored XRP integration in closed trials, and any public partnership would double institutional fund interest within a quarter.
The $224 million in weekly inflows is 4.3 times the prior four-week average for altcoin funds, but still only 12% of Bitcoin's weekly institutional take. The question is not whether XRP has institutional interest. It does. The question is whether that interest can persist through the first quarterly redemption window, when allocators decide if utility infrastructure is worth holding alongside macro hedges.