Web Analytics
Coinpaper
2025-06-07 19:12:23

Is Ripple Selling XRP Behind the Scenes? On-Chain Clues Emerge

A storm is brewing in the XRP base as blockchain analysts and cryptocurrency commentators finger Ripple Labs for secretly dumping millions worth of XRP in dark, intermediary-held wallets — belying public assurances of its escrow-locked reserves. The charges, set off by suspicious exchange-to-wallet leaps and a recent $300 million Webus International treasury transaction, have again put controversy around transparency and regulation compliance at the San Francisco firm at the center of buzz. The Allegations: Escrow Unlocks, Hidden Flows Lurking behind the drama at the center are Ripple's monthly escrow releases. While the company has previously asserted that 55 billion XRP (55% of the circulating supply) are tied up in escrow contracts, critics reference on-chain evidence of morsels of these unlocked tokens being sent to untagged addresses before they reached exchanges. Blockchain analytics firm Santiment tracked a string of transactions in early June when 120 million XRP ($54 million) were moved from a known Ripple escrow account to an unidentified wallet labeled ”rP4X2.sKxv3.” In a matter of hours, the funds were divided into smaller tranches and delivered to Bitstamp, Bitso, and other exchanges — a trend some blame on past sell-offs. “This isn’t about scheduled unlocks. It’s about Ripple using shadow wallets to mask institutional dumps.” — @Crypto_Sleuth_2025 (June 5, 2025) The Webus Connection: A Compliant Backdoor? The scandal heated up after Asia mobility firm Webus International Ltd. disclosed a $300 million XRP treasury managed by SEC-registered adviser Samara Alpha. Crypto analyst Darkhorse believes such an arrangement enables Ripple to sell XRP to middlemen such as Samara, which then sell tokens to corporate clients—skirting a 2024 court injunction against direct institutional sale without SEC approval. “Ripple’s ‘compliant by design’ backdoor lets them move XLP without triggering securities laws. It’s structured, not casual.” — @Darkhorse (June 4, 2025) Ripple denied any partnership with Webus, stating it ”does not control third-party XRP acquisitions.” Blockchain analysis firm ChainArgos, however, observed a cluster of wallets connected to both Ripple and Samara Alpha, raising doubts about coordination. Ripple's Response: ”Fiction Over Fact” To NewsBTC, Ripple CTO David Schwartz rebutted the accusations as ”conspiracy theories,” maintaining the certainty that all escrow releases are pre-planned and transparent. “The XRP Ledger is public. Every transaction is visible. Suggesting we’re secretly dumping tokens ignores both the data and our legal obligations.” — David Schwartz, Ripple CTO The company also referenced its Q1 2025 Markets Report, which identified $240 million in XRP sales—all ODL (On-Demand Liquidity) transactions, not institutional open-market deals. Community Divided: Geniuses or Dodging? XRP owners are split. Some applaud Ripple's alleged genius to avoid regulatory hurdles, while others fear stealth sell-offs will continue to push prices downward. “If Ripple’s dumping via proxies, retail investors are the bagholders. Time for an independent on-chain audit.” Meanwhile, pro-Ripple commentators like Jay Nisbett argue the criticism is overblown: “Webus buying XRP via Samara is just corporate adoption. No different than MicroStrategy holding Bitcoin.” What’s Next? With its price 12% lower since June 1, investors are cautioned to monitor closely two measures: Escrow wallet activity: Suspicious unlocks or transfers could be offloading. Exchange netflows: Long-term flows without retail demand could be institution selling. Regulators are watching too. The SEC is already in court fighting Ripple but could look into the Webus-Samara structure for securities law issues. As accusations grow, this much is sure: in crypto, even the most ”transparent” blockchains can't do away with the looming specter of doubt without disclosure.

Holen Sie sich Crypto Newsletter
Lesen Sie den Haftungsausschluss : Alle hierin bereitgestellten Inhalte unserer Website, Hyperlinks, zugehörige Anwendungen, Foren, Blogs, Social-Media-Konten und andere Plattformen („Website“) dienen ausschließlich Ihrer allgemeinen Information und werden aus Quellen Dritter bezogen. Wir geben keinerlei Garantien in Bezug auf unseren Inhalt, einschließlich, aber nicht beschränkt auf Genauigkeit und Aktualität. Kein Teil der Inhalte, die wir zur Verfügung stellen, stellt Finanzberatung, Rechtsberatung oder eine andere Form der Beratung dar, die für Ihr spezifisches Vertrauen zu irgendeinem Zweck bestimmt ist. Die Verwendung oder das Vertrauen in unsere Inhalte erfolgt ausschließlich auf eigenes Risiko und Ermessen. Sie sollten Ihre eigenen Untersuchungen durchführen, unsere Inhalte prüfen, analysieren und überprüfen, bevor Sie sich darauf verlassen. Der Handel ist eine sehr riskante Aktivität, die zu erheblichen Verlusten führen kann. Konsultieren Sie daher Ihren Finanzberater, bevor Sie eine Entscheidung treffen. Kein Inhalt unserer Website ist als Aufforderung oder Angebot zu verstehen