Why Is XRP Price Stagnant? Analysts Blame Centralized Control—Here’s What You Need to Know
XRP's price stagnation has become the elephant in the room—and analysts aren't shy about pointing fingers. The culprit? Centralized control, a thorn in the side of crypto purists who preach decentralization like gospel.
### The Centralization Conundrum
While Bitcoin maximalists smirk from their decentralized ivory towers, XRP's tight leash from Ripple Labs keeps traders guessing. No wild swings, no euphoric rallies—just a token playing by corporate rules.
### Liquidity or Liability?
Market makers shrug at XRP's sideways action. With Ripple's escrow releases acting like a central bank drip-feeding supply, price discovery gets as exciting as watching regulatory paperwork gather dust.
### The Institutional Paradox
Banks flirt with Ripple's tech while scoffing at its tokenomics. A delicious irony—financial dinosaurs craving blockchain efficiency but allergic to volatility. Meanwhile, traders yawn and chase the next memecoin.
XRP's price might be stuck, but the debate rages on. Will it break free or remain crypto's most compliant rebel? Only time—and SEC lawsuits—will tell.
Ripple’s Grip on XRP Supply
Unlike Bitcoin or Ethereum, XRP was pre-mined. At launch, 100 billion tokens were created—none will ever be minted again. Ripple Labs initially held 80% of the total supply and, as of mid-2025, still controls around 42%.
Roughly 35% of this is locked in monthly escrow accounts, while 7% remains in Ripple’s wallets.
Each month, Ripple releases up to 1 billion XRP, granting it outsized influence over circulating supply and, by extension, price dynamics.
This degree of control has fueled debate over whether XRP can truly be called a decentralized asset. Market movements no longer reflect organic demand and supply, Cava warned.
“Only one hand can perfectly determine XRP’s price direction—and I don’t like that,” he said. “I’m not speaking as a technical analyst, but as a market participant.”
Institutional Demand Remains Elusive
Despite being designed for fast, low-cost cross-border payments—a clear utility for banks and institutions—XRP hasn’t seen the kind of institutional traction that has benefited bitcoin and Ethereum.
Adoption remains thin. Market uncertainty around Ripple’s deals with central banks, along with sparse public information about live integrations, has created doubt. This hesitation may be discouraging larger investors.
“Look at XRP’s chart. It jumped in November 2024, then just moved sideways. That’s not a healthy trend,” Cava noted, comparing it to Bitcoin’s clear upward momentum.
Transparency Issues: Private vs Public Ledger
Another concern is XRP’s dual-ledger architecture. The public XRP Ledger handles retail and open transactions.
However, Ripple reportedly also developed a separate, permissioned ledger specifically for central banks exploring CBDCs.
Why WOULD banks ever bother using XRP’s public network if Ripple already gives them access to private ones?
Banks can't afford to have every move out in the open. The info they handle, their internal workflows, and strategic decisions—those aren’t things they can just put on… pic.twitter.com/NSQ8jQjMTc
While it uses similar technology to the public XRP Ledger, this private version is not accessible to the public and operates independently.
This private ledger is not publicly auditable. While some speculate about a future merger of the two systems,. For many investors, this opacity is a red flag.
In crypto markets where transparency and decentralization are essential for trust, XRP’s closed-door architecture stands out.
Talk of the private ledger on the XRPL began when #Ripple confirmed a private blockchain in 2021.
Many, including myself, have seen high $XRP prices, now believed to be stress tests for future utility. XRP is revealing itself in real time, facts are there, just ignored. pic.twitter.com/O7lzTgSayC
XRP Price Stuck Until Structure Shifts
Technically, XRP continues to function as designed. But structurally, it faces challenges. High token concentration, lack of widespread demand, and limited network transparency restrict its upside potential.
Unless Ripple decentralizes token distribution and opens up its private operations—or a new wave of adoption emerges—XRP is likely to remain trapped in a sideways trend.
Price momentum, as Cava stressed, won’t return without broader demand and a shift in governance dynamics.