The XRP price is sitting in a dangerous spot. At around $1.89, XRP is trading just 1% above a key breakdown zone. On the surface, the chart looks calm. Underneath, several signals suggest risk is quietly building. What makes this setup unusual is not just the proximity to support. It is what failed to happen earlier.
XRP recently printed a bullish signal that usually leads to at least a short-term rebound. This time, it barely moved. That failure is the real warning.
Between December 31 and January 20, the XRP price formed a hidden bullish divergence on the daily chart. Price made a higher low, while the Relative Strength Index (RSI) printed a lower low.
A hidden bullish divergence usually signals that selling pressure is weakening and that buyers may soon regain control. It does not guarantee a rally, but it often leads to a bounce or at least a period of upside relief.
That did not happen here.
After the divergence flashed, XRP barely moved higher. Price stalled, and momentum never expanded. This tells us something important. Sellers may have slowed down, but buyers did not step in to replace them.
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This kind of divergence failure often appears in weak markets. It shows hesitation, not strength. When a bullish signal fails, it usually means demand is missing, not that the signal was wrong.
The rising XRP wedge structure still points to a possible 25% downside move if support breaks. With buyers absent and sellers slowly regaining control, XRP is approaching a moment when even a modest downside move could trigger a much larger move.
Also, if buyers do not show up after the selling pressure eases, what happens when sellers return?
For the first time in weeks, XRP-related ETF products recorded net outflows. The week ending January 23 saw a total outflow of roughly $40.5 million. This came after a long stretch of steady inflows, making it a clear shift in behavior.
ETF flows matter because they reflect large, directional capital. When inflows stop and turn negative, it usually means institutional demand is pausing or stepping back.
The XRP Hodler Net Position Change metric, which tracks the monthly balance change of long-term holders, has flattened and begun to slip. On January 20, long-term holders controlled roughly 232.1 million XRP. By January 24, that figure had dropped to about 231.55 million XRP.