
- Allegations suggest Binance is deliberately suppressing XRP’s price through coordinated sell-offs and liquidity drains.
- Analysts argue XRP threatens Binance’s liquidity-based business model by offering real-world settlement utility.
- Claims highlight that suppression intensifies whenever Ripple secures partnerships, corridors, or legal clarity.
- Broader players—such as SWIFT-linked entities and offshore channels—may also have an interest in curbing XRP’s rise.
- Despite alleged manipulation, XRP’s fundamentals remain strong, with adoption growing across banking, identity, and payments.
Why Binance Is Dumping XRP
According to crypto commentator Pumpius, Binance’s trading activity shows signs of coordinated manipulation—from sudden liquidity drains to sharp red candlesticks. He argues Binance’s model relies on front-running retail traders, wash trading to inflate volume, manipulating funding rates, and ultimately unloading tokens on unsuspecting users.
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The central claim is that XRP has been singled out because it poses a unique threat to Binance’s business. Unlike meme tokens, XRP was designed as infrastructure for payments and settlement. If its adoption continues, it could replace the liquidity pools that Binance profits from, undermining the exchange’s dominance in global crypto markets.
Timing of the Suppression
Pumpius highlights a consistent pattern: Binance intensifies sell pressure whenever Ripple makes progress. Whether it’s new corridors in Japan or the UAE, regulatory breakthroughs, or partnerships with institutions, downward pressure allegedly appears on XRP charts soon after.
The goal, he argues, is to reinforce the perception of XRP as just another altcoin instead of its intended role as a global settlement asset. While no hard market data was provided, the timing is framed as too deliberate to dismiss as coincidence.
Broader Interests at Play
Beyond Binance, Pumpius suggests other forces are aligned against XRP. These include:
- SWIFT-linked entities keen to maintain dominance in cross-border transfers.
- Chinese investors and offshore channels wary of XRP’s open ledger, which could expose opaque capital flows.
Because XRP introduces greater transparency in cross-border settlements, institutions benefiting from opacity may have strong incentives to curb its growth.
Fundamentals Outweigh Market Action
Despite claims of suppression, XRP’s fundamentals appear robust. Ripple continues to make strides in its SEC case, pursues regulatory clarity such as a potential banking license, and supports innovative projects like dnaprotocol.org anchoring identity and genomic data to the XRP Ledger.
Meanwhile, payment corridors in Japan and the UAE point toward real-world adoption that isn’t reflected in market pricing—likely due to alleged manipulation.
Self-Custody and the Road Ahead
Interestingly, the alleged suppression may be backfiring on Binance. Each time large sell-offs occur, more XRP holders move coins into self-custody, reducing reliance on centralized exchanges. This shift supports decentralization and strengthens XRP’s long-term outlook as a settlement-driven asset.
Pumpius concludes that while Binance may succeed in suppressing short-term price action, it cannot change XRP’s underlying role in the future of global payments.