XRPI at $8.02 and XRPR Surges 3.72% to $11.72
The most consequential development in the XRP ETF universe this week did not come from a price chart or a trading desk. It came from a routine SEC 13F filing — the kind of mandatory quarterly disclosure that most market participants ignore — and what it revealed about Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS) has reframed the entire institutional narrative around XRP-USD and the regulated ETF products built around it. Goldman holds $153.8 million across four spot XRP ETF products as of December 31, 2025, making it the single largest disclosed institutional holder of XRP ETF shares in the United States — not by a narrow margin, but by a commanding one. Of the top 30 institutional investors collectively holding just over $211 million in XRP ETF shares, Goldman's $153.8 million represents approximately 73% of the entire top-30 aggregate. The remaining 29 institutional holders share $57.2 million. Goldman is not participating in the XRP ETF market — it is dominating it.
The construction of the position is as revealing as its size. Goldman did not concentrate in a single product. The $153.8 million is split across four funds with striking deliberateness: approximately $40 million in the Bitwise XRP ETF (NYSEARCA: XRP), $38.5 million in the Franklin XRP Trust, $38 million in the Grayscale XRP ETF, and $36 million in the 21Shares XRP ETF. The four allocations sit within a $4 million range of each other. That level of symmetry across competing fund structures — managers whose products are actively fighting for AUM share — is the fingerprint of a structured institutional allocation, not a speculative trade or an accidental accumulation. Goldman is not betting on which XRP ETF wins the product race. It is betting on XRP itself, deliberately distributing counterparty and liquidity risk across the full product landscape while building an exposure that no single ETF's redemption process could disrupt.
This position was built while XRP-USD was deteriorating. The token peaked near $2.40 in early January 2026 and had declined more than 40% by the time the 13F snapshot date of December 31, 2025 captured the position. Goldman was accumulating at lower prices, in size, through regulated wrappers, while retail was selling. The divergence between institutional action and retail sentiment in the XRP ETF market is the most important macro signal the data currently presents.
XRPI at $8.02 — Short Interest Collapses 40.8% to 589,229 Shares, Days-to-Cover at 1.7, and Three Institutions Just Entered Fresh Positions
XRP ETF (NASDAQ: XRPI) opened Friday at $7.85 and trades at $8.02 as of midday — up 2.17%, adding $0.17 on the session from Thursday's previous close of $7.85. The day range spans $7.97 to $8.27, and the 52-week range runs from a $6.50 low to a $23.53 high — meaning XRPI currently sits approximately 66% below its 52-week high while the underlying XRP-USD token trades at $1.43, also deep below its $3.65 cycle peak.
The short interest story for XRPI is the most bullish structural data point in the entire fund. As of February 27, short interest stood at 589,229 shares — a collapse of 40.8% from the 995,641 shares short as of February 12. That is a reduction of 406,412 shares in 15 days. Approximately 4.7% of XRPI's shares remain sold short. Based on average daily volume of 351,818 shares, the days-to-cover ratio sits at 1.7 days — meaning at current average volume, the remaining short position could be fully covered in under two trading sessions. A short interest decline of 40.8% in a two-week window is not noise. It is forced covering, capitulation, or a deliberate reduction in bearish positioning ahead of anticipated positive catalysts — or all three simultaneously.
XRPI's technical picture tells a more complicated story. The fund opened Friday at $7.85, trading below both the 50-day simple moving average of $9.59 and the 200-day simple moving average of $12.93. Both moving averages are declining, and the current price sits 16.3% below the 50-day MA and 37.9% below the 200-day MA. There is no technical argument that XRPI is in a healthy trend — the chart describes a fund that has corrected sharply from its $23.53 high and has not yet begun the process of rebuilding moving average support. The short squeeze from 40.8% short interest reduction adds upward pressure, but the MA structure will act as resistance at $9.59 and then $12.93 on any meaningful recovery.
Three institutional investors entered new XRPI positions in the most recent disclosure period. Flow Traders U.S. LLC initiated a position valued at $1,934,000 in Q3. Q3 Asset Management opened a stake worth approximately $430,000 in Q4. Hurley Capital LLC acquired a position valued at approximately $135,000 in Q3. The combined new institutional entry is modest — $2.499 million — but the significance is directional. Institutions were opening new positions in XRPI during a period when the fund was trading well off its highs and retail sentiment was negative. The same pattern that preceded institutional accumulation in Bitcoin ETFs in late 2023 is playing out in the XRP ETF market in early 2026.
XRPI's structure deserves precise understanding for anyone evaluating it against the spot alternatives. The fund obtains XRP exposure primarily through derivatives — futures and swaps — channeled through a wholly-owned Cayman Islands subsidiary. The fixed income portion is held in cash, cash-like instruments, or high-quality securities. This is a synthetic exposure model, not a direct spot custody model. For a $1.43 XRP price environment where the token itself is volatile and liquidity is mixed, the derivatives-based structure introduces basis risk — the fund's NAV may not track XRP-USD perfectly during volatile sessions. The $0.0163 monthly dividend paid February 19 represents a 2.5% annualized yield on the current price — modest income from the fixed income sleeve but not a primary return driver at these price levels.