Prominent XRP community commentator Pumpius says XRP’s poor performance in Q4 2025 may actually be due to deeper institutional involvement.
Notably, while the XRP price has struggled, Pumpius believes positioning matters more than short-term price action. According to him, investors who understand this difference stay calm and prepare instead of reacting emotionally.
XRP Having a Difficult Quarter Despite Bullish Developments
For context, XRP has had a difficult quarter. In Q4 2025, the price has dropped 35.47%, putting it on track for its worst quarterly performance since Q2 2022, when the Terra collapse shook the crypto market. This decline has occurred alongside a wider market downturn that has dragged down most crypto assets.
Specifically, XRP ETFs launched and recently crossed the $1 billion inflow mark. The Chicago Mercantile Exchange introduced XRP futures and spot-linked derivatives. In addition, Ripple acquired Hidden Road and rebranded it to Ripple Prime, a prime brokerage platform for institutional clients.
Moreover, the broader financial sector has shown growing interest in blockchain systems. For instance, the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) approved steps toward tokenizing stocks and bonds
Major banks have held discussions with U.S. lawmakers about the crypto market structure. At the same time, the XRP Ledger expanded into digital identity tools, zero-knowledge privacy features, and institutional settlement infrastructure.
How The Muted Price Growth Shows Institutional Involvement
Pumpius explained that, in a market moved mainly by retail traders, this level of positive news would likely push prices sharply higher. However, XRP did not see this reaction. Instead, the price has stayed range-bound, which he believes sends an important signal.
According to Pumpius, this means that XRP no longer trades like a retail-focused asset. He argued that institutions now influence its price behavior, and large investors do not buy after prices surge. They prefer to control price ranges while they build positions over time.
He called attention to the growing role of derivatives in determining XRP’s price. Pumpius noted the steady expansion of derivatives markets, strong liquidity at key price levels, and funding markets having more influence than spot trading. He also highlighted repeated resistance near clear breakout points as a sign of institutional activity.
Pumpius said crypto derivatives allow institutions to use leverage efficiently and manage short-term price movement. XRP suits this approach because it offers deep liquidity, global reach, and clearer regulation compared to many other digital assets. These features make it easier for institutions to take large positions without attracting unnecessary risk.
‘Price is what you see. Positioning is what matters
He stressed that weak price action does not mean demand has disappeared. Instead, Pumpius believes institutions continue to accumulate XRP quietly. According to him, they do this through OTC trades, ETF creation processes, treasury structures, and prime brokerage channels, while derivatives markets keep prices under control and push out short-term traders.
Pumpius compared this pattern to commodity markets, where prices often stay flat before major repricing phases. He believes many XRP holders feel frustrated because they still expect fast retail-style rallies, even though XRP has moved into an institutional phase.
Looking at the broader picture, Pumpius argued that major institutions do not build on networks they view as failures. He said governments do not develop digital identity systems on unstable chains, banks do not align regulation with assets they plan to ignore, and the DTCC does not move toward tokenized capital markets without reliable finality.
Pumpius concluded that XRP’s lower volatility alongside growing real-world utility suggests deliberate positioning by large players. “Price is what you see. Positioning is what matters,” he remarked, noting that investors who know the difference between both do not panic.
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Expert Says Only Those Who Understand XRP Positioning Matters More Than Price Begin to Prepare
Prominent XRP community commentator Pumpius says XRP’s poor performance in Q4 2025 may actually be due to deeper institutional involvement.
Notably, while the XRP price has struggled, Pumpius believes positioning matters more than short-term price action. According to him, investors who understand this difference stay calm and prepare instead of reacting emotionally.
XRP Having a Difficult Quarter Despite Bullish Developments
For context, XRP has had a difficult quarter. In Q4 2025, the price has dropped 35.47%, putting it on track for its worst quarterly performance since Q2 2022, when the Terra collapse shook the crypto market. This decline has occurred alongside a wider market downturn that has dragged down most crypto assets.
Specifically, XRP ETFs launched and recently crossed the $1 billion inflow mark. The Chicago Mercantile Exchange introduced XRP futures and spot-linked derivatives. In addition, Ripple acquired Hidden Road and rebranded it to Ripple Prime, a prime brokerage platform for institutional clients.
Moreover, the broader financial sector has shown growing interest in blockchain systems. For instance, the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) approved steps toward tokenizing stocks and bonds
Major banks have held discussions with U.S. lawmakers about the crypto market structure. At the same time, the XRP Ledger expanded into digital identity tools, zero-knowledge privacy features, and institutional settlement infrastructure.
How The Muted Price Growth Shows Institutional Involvement
Pumpius explained that, in a market moved mainly by retail traders, this level of positive news would likely push prices sharply higher. However, XRP did not see this reaction. Instead, the price has stayed range-bound, which he believes sends an important signal.
According to Pumpius, this means that XRP no longer trades like a retail-focused asset. He argued that institutions now influence its price behavior, and large investors do not buy after prices surge. They prefer to control price ranges while they build positions over time.
He called attention to the growing role of derivatives in determining XRP’s price. Pumpius noted the steady expansion of derivatives markets, strong liquidity at key price levels, and funding markets having more influence than spot trading. He also highlighted repeated resistance near clear breakout points as a sign of institutional activity.
Pumpius said crypto derivatives allow institutions to use leverage efficiently and manage short-term price movement. XRP suits this approach because it offers deep liquidity, global reach, and clearer regulation compared to many other digital assets. These features make it easier for institutions to take large positions without attracting unnecessary risk.
‘Price is what you see. Positioning is what matters
He stressed that weak price action does not mean demand has disappeared. Instead, Pumpius believes institutions continue to accumulate XRP quietly. According to him, they do this through OTC trades, ETF creation processes, treasury structures, and prime brokerage channels, while derivatives markets keep prices under control and push out short-term traders.
Pumpius compared this pattern to commodity markets, where prices often stay flat before major repricing phases. He believes many XRP holders feel frustrated because they still expect fast retail-style rallies, even though XRP has moved into an institutional phase.
Looking at the broader picture, Pumpius argued that major institutions do not build on networks they view as failures. He said governments do not develop digital identity systems on unstable chains, banks do not align regulation with assets they plan to ignore, and the DTCC does not move toward tokenized capital markets without reliable finality.
Pumpius concluded that XRP’s lower volatility alongside growing real-world utility suggests deliberate positioning by large players. “Price is what you see. Positioning is what matters,” he remarked, noting that investors who know the difference between both do not panic.