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Just watched this interesting take from an analyst suggesting major banks might be deliberately keeping XRP suppressed below $3 to accumulate quietly. He's pointing to shrinking exchange wallets—like Coinbase going from nearly 1 billion XRP down to 32 million—as potential evidence of hidden institutional buying. The theory is that once these institutions have enough, they'll let the price run.
The hydraulic pressure analogy stuck with me: if liquidity shifts from Bitcoin into XRP, the smaller supply creates exponential upside. Add in potential ETFs and you've got a recipe for serious movement. Currently XRP is trading around $1.44, so there's definitely room if this thesis plays out.
What's wild is the NDA angle—Willie suggests exchanges might be bound by agreements preventing them from explaining where their XRP went. And that Larry Fink response about an XRP ETF being "I can't say" is being interpreted as a hint of something brewing behind the scenes.
Obviously this is all speculative and critics say there's no concrete proof of price suppression. But the exchange wallet data is real, and the idea that institutions are quietly positioning before a bigger move isn't crazy. Whether it actually happens is another story, but worth monitoring if you're following XRP.
The longer-term pitch is even bolder—replacing dollar functions in global trade. Whether that happens or not, the current price action and institutional positioning definitely seems worth watching.