A closely watched on-chain metric is signalling a shift in how $XRP moves through Binance, with the gap between large-holder and retail activity narrowing to its lowest level in weeks, accord
A closely watched on-chain metric is signalling a shift in how $XRP moves through Binance, with the gap between large-holder and retail activity narrowing to its lowest level in weeks, according to blockchain analytics firm CryptoQuant.
Spread Nears May Lows
CryptoQuant analyst Amr Taha noted on July 16 that the Binance Whale vs. Retail Spread for $XRP fell to 35.1%, nearly matching the 35.6% reading recorded in early May. The metric tracks the difference in outflow activity between large holders and smaller retail-sized participants on the exchange. The spread tracks the gap between large XRP outflows and smaller retail-sized outflows on Binance, where whale activity refers to outflow bands above 10,000 XRP and retail activity refers to outflows below that threshold.
A high spread means whales are dominating exchange withdrawals by a wide margin, while a falling spread shows that the difference between large holders and smaller traders is becoming less extreme. Taha stressed, however, that the indicator measures the activity gap only and does not confirm whether whales are buying or selling.
Broader CEX Picture Diverges From Binance
The narrowing on Binance stands against a different trend across the wider centralized exchange market. The 7-day moving average of the XRP Whale vs. Retail Spread across all centralized exchanges rose from 26% on May 6 to 50.9% on June 29, an increase of 24.9 percentage points. The All CEX whale-retail spread now exceeds the Binance figure by 3.3 percentage points, pointing to a divergence in market structure between Binance and the broader exchange landscape.
Whale activity has increased across centralized exchanges while large transfers on Binance declined, signaling concentrated supply movement that could affect liquidity and price dynamics for $XRP.
The divergence adds context to recent exchange reserve data. CryptoQuant data showed that Binance held 2.61 billion XRP, its lowest reserve level since February, though the figure does not reveal whether those funds entered private wallets, custody services, or other venues.
Taha's caution on directionality is worth noting. Because the metric tracks outflows rather than inflows, it reflects changes in withdrawal structure rather than direct selling pressure. A whale pulling $XRP off Binance could be accumulating into self-custody as easily as preparing to sell. The outflow direction alone does not determine intent.
What is clear is that the repeated appearance of a compressed spread is unusual. Analysts caution that a metric reaching its lowest point once can often be dismissed as random fluctuation, but when the same level is hit again, it is considered a notable pattern.
SourcesCryptoQuant: XRP Whale-Retail Gap Splits Across ExchangesCrypto.news: XRP Whales Snap Up 70M Tokens as Exchange Reserves Hit New LowNewsBTC: XRP Whale Vs. Retail Spread Just Hit A 2-Year Low