Crypto markets snap back with ETF inflows and an XRP leverage rush
Crypto ended the session with a familiar late year mood swing. Risk on returned, then hesitated, then returned again. However the tape had one clear headline. US spot Bitcoin ETFs took in about $355 million in net inflows, snapping a seven trading day run of redemptions.
That flow mattered less for the dollar amount than for the psychology. Therefore the market read it as a check on the more tired narrative of steady institutional exits. BlackRock’s fund did the heavy lifting, with roughly $143.8 million of the day’s inflow. Meanwhile Bitcoin held around $87,000, steady enough to let traders focus on positioning.
Bitcoin ETFs: a flow story, not an obituary
Spot Bitcoin ETFs have made a habit of turning sentiment on small pivots. Over the week into December 24, the group still showed net outflows of about $66.9 million. Yet the broader context remains a different picture. Assets in the complex sit near $113.8 billion, with cumulative inflows around $56.9 billion since the 2024 launch window.
So yesterday’s reversal looked more like rotation than capitulation. Fidelity’s product has shown it can pull size back in quickly, including a recent single period haul around $369.2 million. Meanwhile long term holders kept adding on chain, which tends to reduce liquid supply just when flow buyers return. If those inflows persist, liquidity can do the rest.
Still, traders should not confuse stability with calm. However the same ETFs that cushion dips can amplify breakouts, especially into thinner holiday books.
XRP turns noisy again as open interest jumps
XRP stole the microphone from Bitcoin in the derivatives pit. Open interest spiked about 80% in four hours, a burst that looked like fresh leverage rather than slow spot accumulation. Therefore funding rates pushed higher, signalling that longs were paying up to keep exposure.
Price action stayed oddly restrained beside the positioning surge. XRP traded near $2.06, edging up rather than exploding. That divergence often ends one of two ways. Either spot follows and shorts get squeezed, or the crowded longs learn why leverage is expensive when liquidity thins.
The market has seen this film before. Earlier this month, open interest posted much larger percentage jumps. Meanwhile exchange balances have fallen about 18.8%, which could mean holders moved coins off venues, or simply that traders are less willing to leave inventory where it can be sold quickly.
- Open interest rose fast after a decline, which usually means new risk entered, not just a reshuffle.
- Funding turned premium, which supports momentum until it punishes late longs.
- Balances fell, which can tighten supply, although it can also precede profit taking off exchange.
Altcoins: patterns everywhere, conviction uneven
Elsewhere, charts did much of the talking. TRX drew attention after a bullish reversal pattern, with traders floating a roughly 25% upside target. Justin Sun’s reported $18 million bet added colour, although the market still treated it as a trade, not a thesis.
Ethereum looked two sided. Bulls watched for a break of descending resistance. However a bearish pennant remained on some desks, and December outflows around $545 million in ETH ETFs kept the tone cautious.
Memecoins stayed true to type. Pepe saw whale selling pressure, while Dogecoin tried to reclaim key supports against a backdrop of ETF chatter. Meanwhile Solana showed buyers near $120, and BNB held around $800, levels that have become quick sentiment tells for the wider alt complex.
Institutions keep experimenting, while venues tidy up
Institutional crypto did not look like a market preparing to disappear. Metaplanet added about $451 million of Bitcoin in the fourth quarter. Bitmine added another $352 million of Ether to staking. Meanwhile tokenised equities pushed towards a roughly $1.2 billion market capitalisation, a niche that keeps growing even when coins wobble.
Exchanges also cleaned house. Binance moved to delist FDUSD pairs across a broad set of major tokens, including BCH, AVAX, LTC, SUI, ADA, LINK and TAO. Therefore liquidity migrated, spreads shifted, and some retail flow looked briefly stranded.
What traders are watching next
The near term setup is simple and unforgiving. If Bitcoin ETF inflows continue, volatility can rise with the price. However if flows fade again, the market may reprice risk quickly into year end thin liquidity. XRP looks even more binary. A clean resistance break could force hedgers to chase. Yet a dip could trigger the sort of liquidations that turn a small pullback into a fast drop.
By the numbers
- US spot Bitcoin ETF net flow: +$355m on the day
- BlackRock day flow: +$143.8m
- Spot Bitcoin ETFs: $113.8bn assets, $56.9bn cumulative inflows since 2024
- XRP derivatives open interest: +80% in about four hours
- Bitcoin spot level mentioned: ~$87,000
Key takeaways
- Watch ETF flow prints daily. Therefore size matters less than consistency.
- Respect holiday liquidity. However do not fade breakouts without clear stops.
- XRP funding plus surging open interest is a volatility warning, not a comfort blanket.
- ETH remains flow sensitive, so rallies may need catalysts beyond chart levels.
- Exchange delistings can distort short term pricing, so check venue depth before sizing.