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April 22, 2026

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The post XRP Could Become Default Institutional Pick by 2026, Analysts Say appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News

XRP is drawing attention from institutional investors, not because of speculation, but because of what it does, according to analysts who appeared on The XRP Podcast.

Mickle, speaking alongside host Paul Barron, said large capital allocators are entering crypto through a fundamentally different channel than before. Rather than picking individual tokens, institutions are now coming in through ETFs and managed products, which has raised the bar for what gets considered.

For Mickle, XRP clears that bar. Cross-border payments remain slow and costly across the global banking infrastructure, and XRP addresses that problem directly. That clarity, he argued, is exactly what institutional decision-makers respond to.

“XRP is going to be a very obvious thing to them in terms of the potential use case. It plays perfectly into where these institutions understand the pain,” Mickle said. 

ETF Inflows Signal Shifting Appetite

XRP-linked ETFs recorded $1.28 billion in inflows over eight consecutive days, a run Mickle described as structurally meaningful rather than noise-driven.

Once an asset enters ETF frameworks, he said, it transitions from a speculative position to a portfolio allocation decision. That shift expands the pool of eligible buyers significantly, particularly among funds and institutions that cannot justify direct token exposure.

XRP ETFs are increasingly appearing alongside Bitcoin and Ethereum in institutional conversations, according to Mickle, suggesting the asset is moving into the mainstream of crypto portfolio construction.

Narrative Clarity as a Competitive Edge

Mickle also pointed to something less quantifiable but equally important in institutional finance: simplicity of narrative.

Bitcoin carries a digital gold framing. XRP is positioned to fix inefficiencies in how money moves globally. That operational framing, he argued, is easier to present internally, easier to justify to compliance teams, and easier to allocate around compared to more complex crypto ecosystems.

“Simplicity is what institutions actually buy,” he said.

2026 Outlook

If ETF adoption continues at its current pace and payment infrastructure inefficiencies remain unresolved, Mickle believes XRP may stop being an optional allocation and become a default consideration in institutional portfolios by 2026.

Shares of Strategy Inc. (previously known as Microstrategy) surged sharply on Wednesday, leading gains among crypto-linked equities as a rebound in Bitcoin prices lifted sentiment across the sector.

The stock, often seen as a leveraged proxy for the world’s largest cryptocurrency, rose nearly 9.4%, extending a strong run since the onset of the Iran conflict.

The rally comes as Bitcoin climbed to an 11-week high, buoyed by easing geopolitical tensions after Donald Trump extended a cease-fire between the United States and Iran.

The move helped restore risk appetite, driving flows back into digital assets and related equities.

Coinbase, Robinhood also move higher tracking Bitcoin

The broader rally in crypto-linked names followed Bitcoin’s advance to around $78,259 over the past 24 hours.

Analysts said the surge in equities tied to digital assets was largely a function of the cryptocurrency’s momentum.

“Gains for crypto-linked stocks were all down to Bitcoin,” Iliya Kalchev, an analyst at Nexo, told Barron’s.

He added that “savvy traders looking for alternatives to digital assets landed on crypto stocks.”

Alongside Strategy, shares of Coinbase rose 6.4%, while Robinhood gained about 3%.

The broader S&P 500 also moved higher, rising 0.7% in early trading, reflecting improved investor sentiment.

The rally underscores how closely crypto-linked equities track movements in Bitcoin, often amplifying gains during bullish phases due to their operational and balance-sheet exposure to the asset.

Geopolitics drives risk sentiment

The cease-fire extension by Trump followed uncertainty around diplomatic efforts, including the cancellation of Vice President JD Vance’s planned trip to Pakistan for talks related to Iran.

While the aborted visit highlighted lingering risks, the pause in hostilities was enough to lift risk assets.

Ryan Lee, chief analyst at Bitget, said markets could see further upside if tensions ease more decisively.

“Any positive diplomatic breakthrough could…catalyze a broad rally across crypto and equities,” he said, while cautioning that “near-term caution is warranted until clearer signals emerge.”

Why has Strategy outperformed Bitcoin and gold

Strategy’s recent performance has outpaced even Bitcoin itself.

Since the start of the Iran war, the company’s shares have risen about 33%, compared with a roughly 20% gain in Bitcoin.

The stock’s outsized move highlights its positioning as a high-beta play on the cryptocurrency.

The company, led by executive chairman Michael Saylor, holds approximately 815,000 bitcoins, making it the largest corporate holder of the digital asset.

Its valuation is therefore highly sensitive to price movements in Bitcoin.

Interestingly, both Bitcoin and Strategy have also outperformed Gold during the conflict period, challenging traditional assumptions about safe-haven assets.

A MarketWatch report suggested that shifting investor positioning may explain the trend.

According to the report, gold had been one of the most crowded trades among fund managers earlier this year.

However, as volatility increased following the outbreak of hostilities, investors began unwinding positions, including trades that paired long gold positions with short Bitcoin exposure.

Technical factors and investor positioning

Market participants have also pointed to technical dynamics supporting the rally.

In the MarketWatch report, Stephen Coltman, head of macro at 21Shares, noted that short interest in Strategy, while notable at around 11% of free float, is not unusually high by historical standards.

He added that earlier trading strategies, such as the so-called basis trade involving long Bitcoin and short Strategy positions, have become less prominent as valuation premiums narrowed.

Strategy’s shift toward issuing preferred shares to fund Bitcoin purchases has also altered its market dynamics.

Coltman suggested that Bitcoin’s ability to hold key price levels between $60,000 and $70,000 played a crucial role in restoring investor confidence.

With prices now moving decisively higher, sentiment toward both Bitcoin and Strategy has improved.

Profitability tied to Bitcoin levels

Strategy’s financial outlook remains closely linked to Bitcoin’s trajectory.

The company’s average acquisition cost is estimated at around $75,500 per coin, making its profitability highly sensitive to price movements.

As Bitcoin moves further above that threshold, the likelihood of unrealised gains increases, strengthening investor confidence in the stock.

Conversely, any sharp decline could quickly reverse sentiment.

The post MSTR stock leads crypto-linked rally as Bitcoin surges appeared first on Invezz