Quick Read
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Wallets holding 1 million or more XRP now control 74.1% of the total supply, according to Santiment, after adding 1.53 billion coins over the past six months.
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They kept accumulating straight through the crash, buying while smaller holders sold into the Iran-war selloff that drove XRP to its lows for the year, and that split goes back to mid-2024.
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The tight supply helps explain this week’s bounce, because less XRP on the market means it takes less buying to move the price, though heavy concentration is also a risk if big holders sell.
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For the past six months, XRP (CRYPTO:XRP) slid lower as the Iran war battered the whole market, and plenty of holders gave up and sold. However, the biggest holders did the exact opposite.
Wallets holding a million coins or more now own almost three-quarters of all the XRP in existence, and they did that by buying through the worst of it, scooping up 1.53 billion coins while everyone else was selling. Now that XRP has climbed back above $1.20 this week, that patience is paying off.
So what does it mean when so much of the supply ends up in so few wallets? Here’s why the biggest holders kept buying when no one else would.
Why XRP’s Biggest Holders Kept Buying Through the Crash
A wallet holding a million XRP is worth well over a million dollars at today’s price, so this group is mostly high-conviction investors and funds, not casual buyers, along with some exchange wallets holding customer money. Together they now hold 74.1% of all XRP, according to on-chain tracker Santiment.
What makes that number striking is how they reached it. Through the selloff that dragged XRP down to its lowest levels of the year, smaller holders were sending their coins to exchanges to sell, while the biggest wallets quietly added 1.53 billion XRP over six months. Even in early June, as nervous holders kept cashing out, the large wallets kept buying.
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Traders watch splits like this closely, because big holders buying into fear usually means they expect higher prices later. And this isn’t a one-off, as these wallets have been adding XRP steadily since mid-2024, holding course through the SEC settlement and every dip since, including the February crash that briefly scared off 4,500 of them before the buying picked right back up.
Is Heavy Whale Concentration Good or Risky for XRP?
On the upside, when most of the supply is locked up in wallets that aren’t selling, there’s less XRP floating around for everyone else to buy, so it takes less new money to push the price up. This week’s jump is a good example, because when demand came back, it ran into a thin supply, and the price popped.