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With payment volume rising by about 300% and peaking at 1.245 billion XRP, there was recently a dramatic increase in on-chain activity. Large-scale transfers, institutional routing, or coordinated liquidity movement are usually associated with this type of expansion, which does not occur at random but rather indicates an abrupt spike in network usage.
XRP remains trapped
The issue is that this isn't confirmed by the price. XRP is still trapped in a compressed structure on the chart, fluctuating between a declining resistance trendline just under $1.40-$1.45 and a flat support around $1.30.

This is a traditional squeeze setup, but the moving averages are declining as it forms. The price consistently fails to recover the 50 and 100 EMAs, which are still pointing downward. This is controlled consolidation within a larger downtrend, not bullish positioning.
Payment volumes don't push
What does the 300% spike signify then? Although they frequently precede volatility, payment volume spikes do not determine direction. They frequently show redistribution–big players shifting inventory between wallets or exchanges. The fact that the price didn't rise right away after this surge indicates that the activity is being absorbed rather than chased.
Additionally, the timing is off. The volume spike does not appear to be part of an increasing trend in network usage; rather, it appears sudden and unsustained. Instead of being the beginning of a structural change in demand, it runs the risk of becoming just another fleeting anomaly, unless we see an enormous volume surge in the next ETF report.
Technically speaking, XRP is getting close to decision territory. A reevaluation would be necessary if there was a breakout above the declining resistance and the $1.45 zone was reclaimed, opening the door to $1.50–$1.60. The downside, however, is more obvious if the current structure fails: a return to $1.30 support, and if that breaks, a move toward the $1.20 area becomes likely.
The next thing to look out for is simple: volatility expansion. The likelihood of a directional move is increased by the network activity spike, and the squeeze won't last much longer. However, price structure, rather than merely on-chain noise, still determines direction. The chart continues to lean against XRP, as of right now.


Dan Burgin
U.Today Editorial Team