SATS
SATOSHI
ETF
XRP
LINK
Unconfirmed reports say Craig Wright admitted he was wrong about being Satoshi Nakamoto as XRP-linked ETF demand returned by $3.32 million, but the primary evidence available so far supports only part of that narrative and leaves key details unresolved.
AP's report on March 14, 2024 said Britain's High Court dismissed Wright's claim to be Bitcoin's creator, giving markets a clear legal reference point even before the newest social-media claims appeared.
In its February 23, 2026 weekly report, CoinShares said digital-asset investment products posted US$288 million in net outflows, while XRP still recorded US$3.5 million of inflows, alongside Solana at US$3.3 million and Chainlink at US$1.2 million.
The strongest confirmed legal fact remains the UK High Court ruling covered by AP, not a fresh public filing from Wright that explicitly reverses his prior identity claim.
A single unconfirmed report said Wright acknowledged he was wrong and paired that narrative with a US$3.32 million XRP ETF-flow figure; no primary court document or direct statement in the provided source set independently confirms that wording.
The verified weekly number from CoinShares at US$3.5 million is close to, but not identical with, the single unconfirmed flow claim, so the safer read is that direction is corroborated while precision is not.
That distinction matters for traders because a court-verified result can reduce legal narrative noise, but unverified follow-up claims can still amplify short-term volatility around Bitcoin-linked identity debates and adjacent altcoin positioning, similar to risk-perception swings discussed in coverage of broader crypto-competition pressure.
CoinShares data shows XRP attracting capital in a week when the sector as a whole lost funds, because the same report that logged US$288 million of product outflows also logged US$3.5 million into XRP products.
At roughly 1.2% of the absolute value of that weekly outflow, XRP's inflow was small but directionally important, because positive allocations in a risk-off tape can indicate targeted rather than broad market appetite.
The same report's US$3.3 million Solana inflow and US$1.2 million Chainlink inflow suggest this was not purely XRP-specific, but part of a narrower altcoin allocation pocket inside a negative aggregate tape.
The same weekly pattern, XRP positive while many products were negative, lines up with selective rotation themes highlighted in recent reporting on XRP-led ETF flow bursts and with continued product-level interest tied to ongoing XRP ecosystem upgrade narratives.
A market snapshot used in this brief showed XRP at US$1.38 with a 24-hour change of 5.3961%, indicating that price action was constructive at capture time even as broader flows stayed negative.

The same data pull logged XRP near a US$84.50 billion market cap with about US$3.02 billion in 24-hour volume, while a parallel market view placed XRP at rank 4 by market capitalization.

Sentiment remained cautious because the Fear & Greed Index read 17, classified as Extreme Fear, so XRP's positive flow print appears to be an exception inside a still-defensive macro mood.
When a market sits in Extreme Fear conditions yet still shows positive asset-specific allocations in the weekly CoinShares flow table, traders usually watch for confirmation in subsequent weekly data before treating the move as a durable trend.
What to Know
The next useful confirmation is whether future weekly ETP reports keep XRP in positive territory while broader products remain under pressure, because persistence across multiple reporting windows would carry more signal than a single inflow print.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.
Read original article on marketbit.net