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Here’s how XRP spot ETFs are closing in on the $1B milestone

Here’s how XRP spot ETFs are closing in on the B milestone

U.S. spot XRP ETFs have recorded twelve consecutive days of inflows, climbing to $844.9 million as of the 2nd of December. This makes them the fastest‑growing crypto ETF category and puts them within reach of the $1 billion AUM milestone.
On the 1st of December, the products attracted $89.65 million, followed by another $67.7 million the next day. Meanwhile, major firms such as Invesco and Franklin Templeton have filed to launch their own XRP ETFs.
Meanwhile, spot Solana ETFs now total $651 million after recent inflows, while spot Bitcoin [BTC] and Ethereum [ETH] ETFs remain steady at $57.7 billion and $12.8 billion, respectively.
At the same time, a major shift is happening in DeFi.
XRP staking arrives
The new Firelight Protocol, incubated by Sentora and backed by Flare, has introduced staking-based on-chain insurance for XRP.
Despite being one of the largest crypto assets, XRP has lacked native yield options, and Firelight aims to fix that by letting holders stake their tokens to provide insurance coverage for DeFi protocols.
With more than $1 billion lost to exploits annually, Firelight’s insurance‑style model fills a critical gap in DeFi and delivers tangible economic value for Ripple [XRP] stakers. 
Decoding regulatory hurdles
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has barred ETF providers from launching new ultra‑leveraged crypto funds. These products were designed to amplify returns, pushing risk to extreme levels.
On the 2nd of December, the SEC issued nine warning letters to major providers, including Direxion, ProShares, and Tidal Financial. 
This move goes beyond routine regulatory pushback; it signals the SEC’s view that ultra‑leveraged products pose excessive risk for everyday investors.
At the center of the dispute is Rule 18f-4 of the Investment Company Act of 1940, which restricts the amount of leverage a fund can use. 
The rule caps a fund’s value‑at‑risk exposure at 200% of its reference benchmark, a threshold several proposed products would have exceeded.
Many of the rejected ETF filings sought to use derivatives to deliver 5x leveraged exposure to volatile assets like Bitcoin, Ethereum, Nvidia, and Tesla, levels never approved in the U.S. Even 3x products face tight restrictions.
Seeing this, the SEC told issuers to either scale back their leverage or withdraw the filings entirely.
What’s more?
Notably, XRP ETFs’ inflows coincided with the much-awaited crypto market rebound, driven by Bitcoin’s surge from $84,000 to $94,000, at press time, and XRP’s bounce, reflecting a burst of liquidity rather than a true trend reversal.
Nearly $492 million in short liquidations, renewed ETF inflows, the Fed’s halt to quantitative tightening, and a $13.5 billion liquidity injection fueled the sudden spike.

For now, this move looks like a liquidity-driven burst, not sustained strength.

Final Thoughts

The SEC’s intervention marks a clear regulatory line wherein ultra-leveraged crypto ETFs are now firmly outside what U.S. regulators consider acceptable retail risk.
XRP ETFs are quietly becoming one of the fastest-growing crypto investment vehicles.

 

Next: Binance’s path ahead: What a ‘dual ‘leadership’ era can look like

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