Exchange balances for XRP have dropped to their lowest level since 2018, according to Glassnode data from late December 2025. While this has fueled speculation of an impending price surge, historical patterns on Binance suggest otherwise, with past lows often preceding periods of stagnation or further declines rather than immediate rallies. The current tightening coincides with a 30% price drawdown and growing ETF inflows.
Glassnode data indicates that XRP's balances across exchanges reached their lowest point since 2018 in late December 2025, prompting discussions about reduced supply potentially driving prices higher. However, an analysis of Binance reserves reveals a more nuanced picture. Reserves on the platform fell to about 2.6 billion XRP by mid-December 2025, matching the July 2024 low after peaking above 3.5 billion in early September 2025.
Looking back, the July 2024 trough at around 2.7 billion XRP occurred during a period of price underperformance. In the second quarter of 2024, XRP traded between $0.48 and $0.71, averaging $0.56, with monthly closes dipping to about $0.51 in October 2024. The significant rally—to $1.94 in November, $2.08 in December, and $3.04 in January 2025—came months later, only after reserves had rebounded above 3 billion.
Following the late 2024 surge, reserves hovered above 3.2 billion in October and November before declining to 2.8 billion by March 2025. Prices cooled accordingly, closing at $2.08 in December 2024, peaking at $3.04 in January, and settling around $2.09 in February and March. More recently, a September 1, 2025, spike pushed Binance reserves from 2.93 billion to 3.54 billion XRP. From October, they slid to 2.7 billion by late November and 2.6 billion by mid-December, while prices fell from $2.85 in September to $2.03 in December—a roughly 30% drop. The spot price has since entered the $1.80 to $2.00 range.
This pattern suggests that low exchange supply has accompanied corrections rather than sparked quick upturns. The current scenario differs with spot XRP ETFs drawing over $1 billion in net inflows and managing $1.25 billion in assets through late 2025, with no outflow days. These shifts to custodial wallets reduce exchange liquidity but may reflect structural demand rather than pure bullish accumulation. Historical data shows tightening as a necessary but not sufficient condition for rallies, often requiring additional catalysts like regulatory clarity or institutional adoption.