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XRP jumped roughly 12% in the past 24 hours to around $2.52 after the Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) added five spot XRP ETFs to its “active and pre-launch” list.
These listings, visible on DTCC’s public database, have sparked speculation that the long-anticipated exchange-traded products for XRP are moving closer to launch, following the model set earlier this year by Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs.
Why the DTCC listing matters, but doesn’t mean launch yet
The DTCC listing is a major milestone. The corporation is the core settlement and clearing utility for US securities markets, processing over $3.7 quadrillion in transactions in 2024.
Every ETF that trades on a US exchange must be registered through DTCC, making it the central node where Wall Street connects to digital assets.
However, it’s essential to note that inclusion on the DTCC site doesn’t imply that the funds are approved or ready to trade.
It signals that issuers and their custodians have completed the preparatory legwork, including creating tickers, CUSIPs, and back-end infrastructure, while awaiting approval from the SEC.
This is an important distinction. When spot Bitcoin ETFs first appeared on DTCC’s site in late 2023, markets reacted immediately, pushing BTC higher even before the products went live.
What an XRP ETF could mean for market structure and access
The same pattern repeated with Ethereum ETFs, which were listed weeks ahead of their June approval.
The XRP case follows a similar playbook: early infrastructure setup, speculative enthusiasm, and then a waiting game for regulatory approval.
If the SEC approves these funds, they would open new institutional channels to XRP exposure. Traditional brokers and asset managers could route liquidity through familiar ETF vehicles instead of navigating crypto exchanges.
This shift could reduce friction for retirement accounts and mutual fund allocators, who are typically barred from buying crypto directly.
It would also cement XRP’s status as a regulated investment product, expanding its market depth and linking it more tightly to the US financial system.
Regulatory roadblocks between listing and launch
However, several hurdles remain for XRP. The SEC has yet to formally rule on any XRP ETF filing, and no public 19b-4 submissions or S-1 forms have been cleared for trading. The DTCC listing alone doesn’t imply endorsement, as some entries on the database never progress to launch.
What it does confirm is that issuers are preparing in parallel, betting on eventual regulatory clarity following Ripple’s partial court victory last year, which classified programmatic XRP sales as non-securities.
The price reaction shows how sensitive markets remain to even small steps in institutional integration. After weeks of muted trading, XRP broke to a higher high on the hourly chart, extending gains that began earlier in the week.
The move is a breakout from consolidation, fueled by the ETF headline. Whether those gains hold will depend less on DTCC’s database and more on whether the SEC allows these products to cross from pre-launch status to live trading.
If and when that happens, XRP’s market structure could shift. ETF inflows would add a layer of demand independent of spot exchange flows, thereby smoothing volatility and linking XRP performance more closely to fund creations and redemptions.
For issuers, it’s a chance to capture yield from the asset’s liquidity and attract the same kind of institutional capital that has reshaped Bitcoin’s trading ecosystem.
The market is now waiting for the next milestone: the day the “pre-launch” label is removed and replaced with “live”. Until then, the DTCC listings remain a promise that the market is already starting to price in.
The post XRP jumps as 5 spot ETFs close in on debut: What changes when they actually launch? appeared first on CryptoSlate.
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