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Crypto ETF Exodus Deepens as Bitcoin & Ethereum Bleed - XRP Spot ETF Launch Imminent Next Month

Crypto ETF Exodus Deepens as Bitcoin & Ethereum Bleed - XRP Spot ETF Launch Imminent Next Month

Published:
2025-10-31 05:50:25
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Apple stock swung from -5% to +8% within minutes after earnings

Digital asset markets brace for seismic shift as institutional outflows accelerate

The Great Unwinding Continues

Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs hemorrhage assets for third consecutive week - bleeding billions while traditional finance analysts scratch their heads. The exodus defies conventional market logic, creating prime accumulation opportunities for savvy crypto veterans who've seen this movie before.

XRP's Moment Arrives

November marks potential watershed moment with XRP spot ETF poised for launch. The timing couldn't be more perfect - or suspicious - arriving just as legacy crypto products show weakness. Because nothing says 'stable investment' like regulatory uncertainty meeting institutional product rollout.

Wall Street's Crypto Conundrum

Traditional finance scrambles to understand the outflow patterns while crypto natives quietly stack sats. The divergence between institutional sentiment and on-chain accumulation grows wider by the day - someone's going to be very right and someone's going to be writing apology letters to shareholders.

Because when banks finally 'get' crypto, the train has usually already left the station - and this time it's heading to XRP territory whether the suits are on board or not.

Apple faces supply strain and China delays

The company is racing to fulfill demand for the iPhone 17 lineup, which remains constrained even as orders pile up. Some models of the iPhone 16 are also facing delays, leaving Apple scrambling to meet demand heading into the holidays.

The backlog, however, didn’t stop profit from topping expectations. Strong performance from new AI-powered AirPods, which can translate languages in real time, helped balance the weaker iPhone numbers in the previous quarter.

Tim told Reuters that the delay in shipping new models to China was the main reason behind weaker sales there. He said the launch of the new iPhone Air, the thinnest device Apple has ever made and its biggest design change in years, was slowed by logistical setbacks.

“However, we’re very enthusiastic about China,” Tim said. “We love the response to the new products there, and we expect to grow or to return to growth in Q1.”

He added that supply limits are still a problem but one that comes from too much demand, not too little. “Currently in Q1, we’re experiencing supply constraints still on several models of the iPhone 17, and we’re filling orders just as fast as we can. It’s a good problem to have.”

AI, tariffs, and the investor gap

Among the Magnificent Seven tech giants, Apple’s stock gains have been slower this year as investors wait to see its big MOVE in artificial intelligence.

The company has confirmed that major Siri upgrades are coming next year, with Cook saying the team is “making good progress” on those updates.

Natalie Hwang, founding managing partner of Apeira Capital, said, “The expectation of a strong holiday quarter gives Apple a runway to reaffirm demand, but it will be interesting to see how effectively it converts that momentum into a durable AI and infrastructure advantage.”

Still, Apple isn’t escaping the cost of doing business in Trump’s America. The company remains exposed to the U.S.–China trade war, and executives reported $1.1 billion in tariff-related costs last quarter.

Kevan Parekh, Apple’s Chief Financial Officer, said those costs could climb to $1.4 billion in the current quarter ending in December, pushing gross margins to 47–48%. Wall Street’s average estimate sits at 46.9%.

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