June 10, 2026 ChainGPT

CryptoQuant: Muted whale inflows point to liquidation-driven XRP pullback

CryptoQuant: Muted whale inflows point to liquidation-driven XRP pullback
Headline: CryptoQuant Analyst: XRP Pullback Driven More by Liquidations and Market Weakness Than Whale Dumping XRP’s recent decline looks more like a leverage-driven correction and broad market weakness than a coordinated sell-off by large holders, according to CryptoQuant contributor Pelin Ay. Ay shared a CryptoQuant chart that breaks XRP Ledger inflows to Binance into value bands—from under 1,000 XRP up to transfers larger than 1 million XRP—overlaying those flows with XRP’s dollar price. That segmentation helps separate routine retail deposits from transfers likely tied to whales or institutional wallets. Key observations - Historically, the largest transfer cohort (1M+ XRP) has been a major component of Binance inflows. “Transfers exceeding 1 million XRP are dominant in the chart during certain periods,” Ay wrote, noting consistently high inflows from whale and institutional addresses between 2021–2025. - After XRP’s 2025 peak near the $3 area, the chart shows a clear decline in the biggest inflow bands. In Ay’s view, that pattern indicates large holders have not been moving tokens to Binance at the same intensity seen in earlier market phases. - That matters because rising exchange inflows are a common on-chain signal of sell-side supply—assets moved to exchanges can be sold, used as collateral or repositioned. In prior pre-crash episodes, Ay notes, there were sharp spikes in the 100k–1M and 1M+ bands. “Currently… there is no such extraordinary inflow surge,” she said, reducing the likelihood of aggressive whale selling and mass profit-taking. What this implies Ay argues the structure is more consistent with liquidation-driven price pressure: forced deleveraging and broader market weakness can quickly push prices down without the hallmark on-chain signature of whales depositing large amounts to exchanges. That distinction matters because liquidation-led moves can be fast but don’t necessarily reflect long-term holders actively distributing supply. She adds a constructive caveat: if Binance inflows remain muted—especially in the 1M+ XRP band—selling supply should ease, and with increased demand, XRP could find its way back toward the $1.8–$2.0 range. Conversely, a renewed spike in large inflows would weaken this thesis by signaling that big wallets are again moving meaningful supply onto exchanges. At press time, XRP traded at $1.1444. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news