On Monday, July 22, XRP gained 1.76%. Following a 0.67% rise on Sunday, July 21, XRP ended the session at $0.6084. XRP outperformed the broader crypto market, which declined by 1.69% to a total market cap of $2.387 trillion.
On Monday, speculation about the possibility of a settlement in the Ripple case intensified. The SEC’s closed meeting is on July 25, with settlement as an agenda item.
Despite expectations of a settlement, XRP price action suggests some investor caution. Settlement terms could materially impact near-term XRP price trends.
In March, the SEC filed its remedies-related opening brief, pushing for a $2 billion penalty and an injunction prohibiting XRP sales to institutional investors. The SEC alleged that Ripple continued to violate US securities laws after the December 2020 court filing (post-complaint). Significantly, an injunction could impact Ripple’s US expansion plans.
Ripple filed its remedies-related opposition brief in April, proposing a $10 million penalty. Notably, Ripple argued that post-complaint activity complied with US securities laws. Ripple also highlighted that the SEC never accused it of recklessness that would warrant an excessively punitive penalty.
The SEC filed its remedies-related reply brief in April, providing the penalty floor of $102.6 million for the case, calculated using its methodology from previous cases.
It is possible that the SEC reassessed Ripple’s post-complaint activity and reconsidered its position in the case.
In the remedies-related opposition brief, Ripple argued that post-complaint activity included XRP sales to accredited investors and via ODL agreements. Sales to accredited investors are exempt from US securities laws. Furthermore, ODL contracts prevent profits or losses.
The Howey Test’s third prong is the expectation of profit through the effort of others. XRP holders via ODL contracts cannot expect profits and do not meet Howey’s test.
Favorable settlement terms could boost XRP demand and support a return to $1.00. Ripple may also address the classification of its planned stablecoin. The SEC’s reply brief targeted Ripple’s stablecoin plans, calling it an issuance of a new unregistered crypto asset.
A stablecoin, by definition, is designed to maintain a stable value relative to a specific asset or benchmark, such as the US dollar. It is unclear how the SEC sees a stablecoin meeting the third prong of the Howey test. SEC confirmation that Ripple’s stablecoin would not be a security would be favorable.
A settlement could pave the way for a US XRP-spot ETF market. On Monday, the SEC approved US ETH-spot ETF applications. The ETF Store President shared a legal perspective from Foley and Lardner LLP, stating,
“The most important development from approval order was SEC heavily implying ETH is commodity & not security. Approval order demonstrates crypto assets can start life as security & transition to commodity over time.”
SEC affirmation that XRP is not security and issuer plans to launch an XRP-spot ETF could also support an XRP return to $1.00.
In July 2013, XRP struck a high of $0.9327 following the Programmatic Sales of XRP ruling. In July 2023, Judge Analisa Torres ruled that programmatic sales of XRP do not satisfy the third prong of the Howey Test.
Investors should remain alert as speculation about a settlement intensifies. Stay updated with our latest news and analysis to manage exposures to XRP and the broader crypto market.
XRP remained comfortably above the 50-day and 200-day EMAs, sending bullish price signals.
A return to the $0.65 handle would support a move to the $0.6609 resistance level. An XRP break above the $0.6609 resistance level could bring the $0.70 handle into play.
SEC vs. Ripple case-related updates require consideration.
Conversely, an XRP drop below the $0.5739 supported level could give the bears a run at the 200-day EMA.
With a 14-day RSI reading of 68.27, XRP may return to the July 17 high of $0.6378 before entering overbought territory.
With over 20 years of experience in the finance industry, Bob has been managing regional teams across Europe and Asia and focusing on analytics across both corporate and financial institutions. Currently he is covering developments relating to the financial markets, including currencies, commodities, alternative asset classes, and global equities.