XRP rally is cooling as open interest collapses across exchanges
Based on data from CryptoQuant, analytics expert Amr Taha flagged a sharp reset in XRP (ticker: XRP) derivatives, with open interest falling from about $660 million in October 2025 to roughly $203 million by March 3, 2026. The figures indicate a rapid unwind of leveraged exposure across major venues, consistent with a broad de-risking phase rather than a spot-driven shift.
Open interest tracks the notional value of outstanding futures and perpetual contracts; when it collapses this quickly, it usually signals reduced speculative leverage and a cooling of momentum. It does not, by itself, capture spot market demand or long-term fundamentals, but it often sets the tone for near-term price action as liquidity thins and forced flows subside.
Why the XRP open interest drop matters for near‑term momentum
Funding rates appear to be compressing toward more neutral readings, indicating diminished willingness to pay premia for long exposure. As reported by Brave New Coin, market research analyst Daniel Chung said the change “reflects a shift from aggressive speculation to more balanced positioning.”
According to CCN research analyst Abiodun Oladokun, recent liquidations have skewed heavily against longs, with an example print showing about $439,000 in long liquidations versus $21,000 in shorts in a single day. That imbalance tends to pressure price during volatile windows and can sap near-term upside follow-through until positioning resets.
Historically, a derivatives washout can precede a large move in either direction, so the signal is directional for leverage, not necessarily for price. If funding turns negative and open interest contracts further, it would suggest continued risk-off positioning; by contrast, stabilization in both metrics would be more consistent with consolidation and rebuilding of two-way liquidity.
Signals behind the move: funding rates and long liquidations
Open interest measures how many derivative contracts remain open, funding rates align perpetuals with spot by periodically paying one side of the market, and long liquidations occur when collateral falls below maintenance thresholds, triggering forced sells. Together, these indicators map leverage intensity, the cost of holding directional exposure, and the stress points that can accelerate intraday moves.
For institutional context, CME Group’s Tim McCourt noted in October 2025 that institutional adoption of newly listed XRP futures reached record levels, with open interest surpassing $1 billion within three months of launch. The subsequent decline in exchange open interest suggests much of the speculative froth has receded even as longer-horizon participation remains possible, leaving near-term momentum contingent on whether leverage metrics stabilize or continue to compress.
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