Canary Capital Group just opened the floodgates for institutional XRP exposure. The firm launched the first US-listed spot XRP ETF on Thursday, and investors showed up in force—$58 million in first-day trading volume, to be exact. That makes it the strongest ETF debut of 2024, according to Bloomberg analyst Eric Balchunas.
The Canary XRP ETF (XRPC) carries a 0.50% annual expense ratio and holds physical XRP tokens rather than relying on swaps or futures. Custody duties fall to Gemini Trust Company and BitGo Trust Company. CEO and founder Steven McClurg pointed to improved regulatory clarity as the catalyst that made the launch possible.
And that clarity has been a long time coming. A landmark 2023 court decision ruled that XRP isn't a security when sold on public exchanges. Ripple Labs finally settled its protracted battle with the SEC in August. More recently, the SEC approved generic listing standards for crypto ETFs—essentially building the regulatory guardrails that give issuers a legitimate path to market.
Why XRP Isn't Just Another Crypto Token
Bitcoin gets positioned as digital gold. Ethereum powers smart contracts. XRP occupies different territory entirely: it's built for moving money across borders quickly and cheaply. The XRP Ledger was designed from the ground up for fast, low-cost international transfers. Transactions settle in three to five seconds and cost fractions of a cent. There's no energy-hungry mining operation—the network runs on a consensus mechanism instead. According to the prospectus, it can handle up to 1,500 transactions per second.
That payments-focused utility story is starting to resonate with institutions tired of chasing the more speculative, headline-grabbing corners of the crypto market. For investors looking beyond volatility and hype, XRP offers something closer to infrastructure—and now they can access it through a regulated ETF wrapper.