If you've been holding XRP (XRP) and wondering when to lock in gains, the charts might be giving you an answer you don't want to hear. Wednesday's price action pushed XRP below some important technical guardrails, and the indicators that traders watch closely are starting to line up on the bearish side.
The Moving Averages Tell a Story
XRP is currently trading near $2.53, which sounds fine until you realize it just dropped below two key exponential moving averages that often act as support. The 20-day EMA sits at $2.41 and the 50-day at $2.54, meaning price is now sandwiched between them in an uncomfortable spot. Above all this, the 100-day EMA near $2.64 is acting like a ceiling that bulls can't seem to punch through.
The bigger picture isn't much prettier. Since September, XRP has been carving out a large descending triangle—a pattern that technical analysts generally interpret as bearish continuation. Last week saw another rejection at $2.55 right at the descending resistance line, and each subsequent attempt to break higher has failed. That's classic behavior when sellers are in charge and momentum is fading.
The Relative Strength Index, which measures how overbought or oversold an asset is, sits near 45. That's not screaming "sell" territory, but it does show weak demand and not much excitement from buyers. If XRP closes below $2.30, things could get interesting in a hurry, potentially opening the door to $2.00. Break the lower trendline near $2.20, and we could see a retest of the July support base around $1.63.
Meanwhile, Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), and Solana (SOL) are also down on the day, but XRP is lagging behind them—never a great sign when you're supposed to be one of the large-cap crypto leaders.
The Short-Term Picture Gets Worse
Zoom into the hourly chart and the picture doesn't improve. XRP tried to rally back toward $2.45 recently but failed right as the Supertrend indicator flipped to red—a signal that short-term traders use to identify trend reversals. The Parabolic SAR dots also moved above price, which is another way of saying "selling pressure is building."
There's one last line of defense: an ascending intraday trendline that's been holding since Nov. 5, currently sitting near $2.30. If that breaks, bears could quickly push toward $2.20 in the next few sessions. The price action is showing classic compression between lower highs and a rising base, which usually means a breakout is coming. Unfortunately, the technical indicators are suggesting that breakout is more likely to be down than up.
What the On-Chain Data Says
Technical charts are one thing, but what are actual holders doing? According to CoinGlass data, there were mild net inflows of $31 million on Nov. 12. That sounds positive until you look at the broader pattern—outflows have been dominating recent activity. Every time XRP sees a short-lived rebound, spot holders have been using it as an opportunity to sell.
The divergence here is telling: price has remained relatively stable while inflows are fading. That usually signals weakening trader confidence. Large holders—the so-called "whales"—appear to be distributing their positions instead of accumulating above $2.50. When the smart money is heading for the exits, retail investors might want to pay attention.
What Needs to Happen to Turn This Around
Look, XRP isn't dead in the water. For the bulls to regain control, the token needs to reclaim the $2.45 to $2.55 range and close above that 50-day EMA. That would shift momentum back in their favor and potentially invalidate the bearish setup.
But until that happens, the path of least resistance is lower. Support targets sit at $2.00 and $1.63. The momentum indicators, the moving averages, and the Supertrend are all pointing in the same direction right now, and it's not up. For traders sitting on profits from recent rallies, these three indicators are basically flashing neon signs that say "maybe take some money off the table."
Nobody can predict the future, and crypto has a habit of doing the unexpected. But when the technical picture, short-term indicators, and on-chain behavior all align bearish, it's worth listening. Sometimes the best trade is locking in gains and waiting for a better entry point.