Ripple’s XRP has seen a minor weekly uptick amid a broader market revival, yet analysts warn of a potential sharp decline below the $1 level. While some predict a long-term target of $0.90 based on technical patterns, bullish indicators include significant whale accumulation and sustained exchange outflows, suggesting reduced selling pressure. The asset’s weekly Relative Strength Index has entered oversold territory, which some view as a potential precursor to a rally.
Ripple’s XRP registered a minor uptick over the past week, coinciding with the broader cryptocurrency market’s revival. Some analysts, however, believe its price may decline sharply and fall below the psychological $1 level.
The asset currently trades around $1.39 with a market capitalization of approximately $85 billion, making it the fourth-largest cryptocurrency. Earlier this week, it failed to reclaim the $1.50 mark.
One analyst monitoring its performance is the X user TradingShot. They noted XRP has been moving within a downward channel since its all-time high of over $3.65 in July 2025.
TradingShot suggested the next potential pullback may lead to a drop toward the 1M MA100 support, set at under $0.90. “Our long-term Target is $0.9000,” the analyst concluded.
Another X user, WealthManager, also presented a bearish forecast, warning a “huge drop could be imminent.” Prominent Bitcoin educator Adam Livingston spoke sharply against the asset, stating he would prefer FTX customer refund claims over XRP.
Despite pessimistic views, numerous market observers pointed out that large investors have purchased almost 4.2 billion tokens worth about $5.7 billion since the October 10 crash. This reduces the supply available on the open market.
XRP’s exchange netflow has shown consistent outflows exceeding inflows for several weeks. This shift indicates investors are moving holdings off centralized platforms, easing short-term selling pressure.
The asset’s weekly Relative Strength Index has fallen to around 30, marking oversold territory. Ratios above 70 are generally considered bearish.
